Community & Economic Development Division Planning and Development Services

7447 East Indian School Road, Suite 105 Scottsdale, Arizona 85251

To: General Plan Update Citizen Review Committee 2020 From: Adam Yaron, Project Coordination Liaison Through: Erin Perreault, AICP, Long Range Planning Director CC: Randy Grant, Community & Economic Development Director Date: November 2, 2020 Re: Item 3: Update for Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

Regarding Agenda Item #3, please see revised Enclosure 1 so as to provide the CRC with committee member comments that have been submitted prior to the scheduled November 2nd meeting.

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Community & Economic Development Division Planning and Development Services

7447 East Indian School Road, Suite 105 Scottsdale, Arizona 85251

To: General Plan Update Citizen Review Committee 2020 From: Adam Yaron, Project Coordination Liaison Through: Erin Perreault, AICP, Long Range Planning Director CC: Randy Grant, Community & Economic Development Director Date: November 2, 2020 Re: Item 3: Draft General Plan 2035 – Table of Contents, Executive Summary, and Section 3 – Appendix

This memorandum presents the General Plan Update Citizen Review Committee (CRC) with the Draft General Plan 2035 Table of Contents, Executive Summary, and Section 3 – Appendix. The Appendix includes: Abbreviations, Glossary, Related Plans & Policies, Photo Credits, and Acknowledgments (Pages i-XV, 254-296).

BACKGROUND As part of the Citizen Review Committee Workplan – the CRC will be reviewing the Task Force recommended Draft 2035 General Plan (Enclosure 1) which includes the Executive Summary, and Section 3 – Appendix. All Draft Plan items that were included by the General Plan Task Force, that is not located in the Scottsdale General Plan 2001, are noted in a darker BLUE color as “(NEW)”. This version of the Draft Plan also includes input from a Technical Advisory Committee (TAC) comprised of city staff that reviewed and provided input on the plan between February and April of 2020 (city staff comments notated in GREEN) and comments in RED which are derived from community members during the Citizen Outreach that occurred since 2014.

KEY CONISDERATIONS The draft 2035 General Plan includes an Executive Summary. The Executive Summary is intended to summarize the Plan in a way that readers can easily become acquainted with the purpose of the plan, its Chapters - and associated Elements, without having to read the full Plan. Section 3 of the draft 2035 General Plan includes an Appendix that is comprised of: Abbreviations, Glossary, Related Plans & Policies, Photo Credits, and Acknowledgments. STAFF RECCOMENDATION Staff recommends that the General Plan Citizen Review Committee confirm receipt of and consider any public comments submitted on this agenda item and then review the Draft General Plan 2035, Table of Contents, Executive Summary, and Section 3 – Appendix, (Enclosure 1) and discuss any questions or comments you may have regarding this item during the CRC public meeting discussion.

Enclosure: 1. Draft General Plan 2035 – Table of Contents, Executive Summary, and Section 3 – Appendix (Pages i-XV and 254- 296)

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Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

CITY OF SCOTTSDALE GENERAL PLAN 2035 CONTENTS

Executive Summary iii Section 1 - Preface

Prologue 3 Vision and Values 4

■ Vision Statement 4 ■ Community Aspirations 6 ■ Our Community Values 12 ■ Foundation for the Vision 14

Introduction 22

■ Purpose of the General Plan 22 ■ Community Profile 32

Section 2 - Chapters

1) Character & Culture Chapter 46

■ Character & Design Element 49 ■ Land Use Element 63 ■ General Plan Amendment Criteria 76 ■ Arts, Culture & Creative Community Element 83

2) SUSTAINABILITY & Environment Chapter 90

■ Open Space Element 93 ■ Environmental Planning Element 105 ■ Conservation Element 113 ■ Water Resources Element 119 ■ Energy Element 123

3) Collaboration & Engagement Chapter 128

■ Community Involvement Element 131

i Experience. Livability. Prosperity. Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

4) Community Well-Being Chapter 136

■ Healthy Community Element 139 ■ Housing Element 147 ■ Recreation Element 151 ■ Safety Element 159

5) Connectivity Chapter 166

■ Circulation Element 169 ■ Bicycling Element 179

6) Revitalization Chapter 184

■ Neighborhood Preservation & Revitalization Element 187 ■ Conservation, Rehabilitation & Redevelopment Element 193 ■ Growth Areas Element 199 ■ Cost of Development Element 205 ■ Public Services & Facilities Element 209 ■ Public Buildings Element 215

7) Innovation & Prosperity Chapter 222

■ Economic Vitality Element 225 ■ TOURISM ELEMENT 233

8) Implementation Chapter 238

Section 3 - Appendix

Appendix 254

■ Abbreviations 257 ■ Glossary 258 ■ Related Plans & Policies 282 ■ Maps 288 ■ Photo Credits 294 ■ Acknowledgements 296

Experience. Livability. Prosperity. ii Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

OVERVIEW The General Plan is the primary tool for guiding the future of the city. It contains the community’s goals and policies on character and design, land use, open space and the natural environment, business and economics, community services, neighborhood vitality, transportation, and growth. It shapes the physical form of the city, yet it also addresses other aspects, such as human services, EDUCATION, protection of desert and mountain lands, arts SHIMOKUBO: and culture, community health AND WELL-BEING, and the character of neighborhoods. The General Plan provides a guide for day-to-day, short- and long-term decision-making. Scottsdale’s General Plan has three interrelated roles:

■ It is an expression of community vision, aspirations, values, and goals; ■ It is a decision-making guide; and ■ It fulfills State and City Charter legal requirements. The goals and policies in the General Plan are implemented through ordinances, regulations, ongoing procedures, recommendations from city boards and commissions, and decisions made by the City Council. The General Plan is also carried out by private actions and initiatives in the community. Whether public or private, implementation of the General Plan takes many forms. Some of the most recognizable applications of the General Plan include the city’s physical development, road expansions or abandonments, neighborhood revitalization projects, preservation efforts, capital improvements, fiscal planning, budgeting and project funding, and recreation facilities.

iii Experience. Livability. Prosperity. Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

The framework for the General Plan is regulated by the State of Arizona, which requires the General Plan to establish community-wide goals and development policies for a variety of topics. Every ten (10) years, the city is required to updateTHE its GENERAL General Plan PLAN and IS: send it to the Scottsdale voters for ratification. The city is also required to render an annual report on the status of the General Plan and progress in its application.√ A Statement of Vision

Arizona State Statues require consistency between√ theA adopted Set of Community-Wide General Plan Goalsand all zoning regulations and rezoning actions. Applicants for such requests should TYPICALLY refer to the whole document, as well as any adopted CharacterA Area Decision-Making or Neighborhood Guide for Plans. The Elements in each chapter of the General Plan, taken√ intoQuality consideration Development with and the Programs goals, policies, vision, aspirations, and community values, supply a “checklist” for evaluating any proposed development application for consistency √withA theFramework General for Plan. More Specific Planning

THE GENERAL PLAN IS: THE GENERAL PLAN IS NOT: A Statement of Vision √ x A Zoning Ordinance A Set of Community-Wide Goals √ x A Rigid/Static Document A Decision-Making Guide for x A City Budget √ Quality Development and Programs x “Just a Land Use Map” √ A Framework for More Specific Planning

THE GENERAL PLAN IS NOT:

x A Zoning Ordinance Experience. Livability. Prosperity. iv x A Rigid/Static Document

x A City Budget

x “Just a Land Use Map” Executive Summary Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

What’s New? General Plan 2035 updates the 2001 General Plan to include new state requirements and reflect community, regional and national changes that have occurred since the original plan was created in the 1990s. The following are some aspects of General Plan 2035 that are different from the 2001 General Plan:

■ New vision statement, community values, and organization of the overall plan. ■ Enhanced emphasis on tourism, fiscal sustainability, open space, community health, arts and culture, and safety. ■ Enhanced focus on community character, such as building height, transitions/buffers, scenic views, noise and light pollution, and contextual compatibility. ■ Shift from a primary focus on new development to revitalization, redevelopment, and preservation. ■ Two state-mandated elements: Energy and Neighborhoods Preservation & Revitalization. ■ TwoTHREE community-added elements: Arts, Culture & Creative Community, and Healthy Community, AND TOURISM. ■ Revised Character Area Planning map showing existing/adopted plans and possible boundaries for future Character Areas. ■ Removal of ambiguous designations from the Land Use Map (e.g. “resort stars,” golf course (G), and open space circle designations). ■ Expanded and more specific General Plan Amendment Criteria addressing: ■ Land use changes of 10 or more acres, ■ Proposed land use changes to the Scottsdale Mcdowell Sonoran Preserve, ■ Designation/expansion of Infill Incentive Districts, ■ Proposed changes to the text of the amendment criteria, ■ Proposed growth area designation or expansion, and ■ Clarification ofmajor/minor amendment determinations for criteria maintained from the 2001 General Plan—such as properties with land use category overlays (e.g. Shea Corridor or Regional Use). ■ A list of programs to carry out the plan and evaluate annual progress.

v Experience. Livability. Prosperity. Executive SummaryEnclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

What’s Not New? Although many new or enhanced concepts are included in General Plan 2035, many concepts from the 2001 General Plan remain:

■ The foundation for the vision statement: Scottsdale’s Shared Vision and CityShape 2020. ■ The three-levels of planning—General Plan, Character Area Plan, and Neighborhood Plan—established in CityShape 2020. ■ A substantial focus on community character and design. ■ The mix and distribution of land uses city-wide. ■ Recognition that Scottsdale is primarily a residential, Sonoran Desert community and that the automobile will continue to be the primary form of transportation in Scottsdale for the next twenty years. ■ Scottsdale’s leadership role in environmental stewardship and open space preservation. ■ The existing Growth Areas (Downtown OLD TOWN, Airpark, and McDowell), but with specific rather than generalized boundaries. ■ The existing adopted Character Areas. ■ Four major General Plan amendment criteria that focused on changes in land use, acreage, Character Area conformance, and Water/Sewer infrastructure.

Framing the Future—Our Vision and Values The content of the General Plan is shaped by the community’s vision statement, and three main Community Aspirations— Exceptional Experience, Outstanding Livability, and Community Prosperity. Within the vision and aspirations are seven community values that organize the plan into chapters. Each chapter is further refined by “elements” or specific topics required by state law or community mandate. Each element contains goals and policies to guide Scottsdale’s future.

Experience. Livability. Prosperity. vi Executive Summary Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

Vision Statement Scottsdale will be an exceptional Sonoran Desert experience and the premier southwestern tourist destination. Our SCOTTSDALE’S diverse neighborhoods will foster outstanding livability through connected, healthy and sustainable communities. Scottsdale WE will thrive by AS A RESULT OF OUR EDUCATED CITIZENRY AND BY attracting and retaining business centers of excellence that encourage innovation and prosperity. SCOTTSDALE WILL BE AN EXCEPTIONAL SONORAN DESERT EXPERIENCE AND THE PREMIER SOUTHWESTERN TOURIST DESTINATION.

Community Aspirations:

EXCEPTIONAL OUTSTANDING COMMUNITY EXPERIENCE LIVABILITY PROSPERITY Scottsdale is a special place Scottsdale will continue Scottsdale will be a thriving, in the Sonoran southwest. to offer a variety of prosperous city that attracts Our community will continue multi-generational and grows world-class to draw ATTRACT visitors, lifestyle choices that are businesses, leverages businesses, and new responsibly planned, technology, encourages residents from around connected, attractive, and innovation and creativity, the world because of our supported with appropriate and cultivates ACADEMIC natural desert beauty; infrastructure and services OPPORTUNITIES FOR a vast open spaces and for urban, suburban, well-educated CITIZENRY environmental assets; and rural living. Our AND workforce. Our citizens high standards for design; neighborhood experiences will have opportunities to world-class events and will advance well-being and prosper. resorts; vibrant downtown; safety through promotion and distinctive heritage and of physical and social ■ Innovation & Prosperity- culture. connection. Chapter 7

■ Character & Culture- ■ Collaboration & Chapter 1 Engagement- Chapter 3 ■ SUSTAINABILITY & ■ Community Well-Being- Environment- Chapter 2 Chapter 4 ■ Connectivity- Chapter 5 ■ Revitalization- Chapter 6

vii Experience. Livability. Prosperity. Executive SummaryEnclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

EXCEPTIONAL EXPERIENCE 1) Character & Culture Chapter The Character & Culture Chapter establishes policies for the character of the community, as well as, the types and locations of land uses throughout the city. It emphasizes the importance of the diverse character, unique quality of design, varied lifestyle choices, and commitment to the arts. It includes the State-mandated Land Use Element, Future Land Use Map, and General Plan Amendment Criteria. It also includes two elements added by the community—Character & Design; and Arts, Culture & Creative Community.

■ Character & Design Element The goals and policies of the Character & Design Element focus on the important aspects, connections, transitions, and blending of character that ensure our community evolves as an integrated mosaic. Topics covered in this element include development appropriateness, character types, building height, Character Area Planning, design, public spaces, landscaping, light and noise pollution, and western and equestrian lifestyle.

■ Land Use Element‡ The goals and policies of the Land Use Element reflect careful consideration for the types and locations of defined land uses and delineate the criteria that should be ARE carefully considered when contemplating a change in Land Use Category (General Plan Amendment Criteria). Topics covered in this element include land use transitions, land use balance, resource conservation, land use and transportation, airport compatibility, the Future Land Use Map, and General Plan Amendment Criteria. SHIMOKUBO: ■ Arts, Culture & Creative Community Element The goals and policies of the Arts, Culture & Creative Community Element speak to the important role that arts, culture and the creative community will CONTINUE TO play in the city’s future. Scottsdale will build on its authentic cultural experiences, innovative programs, and competitive regional standing in arts and culture. Topics covered in this element include regional cultural standing, arts and culture programming, historic preservation, and the creative community.

[‡ = State-required]

Experience. Livability. Prosperity. viii SHIMOKUBO: FIRST PARAGRAPH... Executive Summary WHAT IS “GREENEnclosure BUILT”? 1 of Agenda Item 3 LET’S REPLACE WITH A MORE EXCEPTIONAL EXPERIENCE UNDERSTANDABLE TERM. 2) SUSTAINABILITY & Environment Chapter The SUSTAINABILITY & Environment Chapter focuses on Scottsdale’s environmental resources and open spaces—from protecting natural systems and the water supply to creating a green built environment. Goals and policies in this chapter also seek to provide a comprehensive system of open spaces, including further enhancement and protection of the Scottsdale McDowell Sonoran Preserve. Five State-mandated elements are included in this chapter: Open Space, Environmental Planning, Conservation, Water Resources, and Energy.

■ Open Space Element‡ As stewards of parks and open spaces, the city is dedicated to promoting healthy lifestyles and a higher-level of livability by providing safe, accessible, and attractive outdoor space. Scottsdale will respect and sustainably manage its open space resources. Topics covered in this element include open space types, the Scottsdale McDowell Sonoran Preserve, and open space management.

■ Environmental Planning Element‡ The city’s natural environment includes both the ecological systems that sustain Sonoran Desert vegetation and wildlife, as well as other elements that provide clean air and water, protect the community from hazards, and create a beautiful and enjoyable setting. This element provides goals and policies for protecting and enhancing the quality of Scottsdale’s natural and human habitats for future generations. Topics covered in this element include Sonoran Desert habitat protection, air quality, recycling, green building, and water quality.

■ Conservation Element‡ Scottsdale is active in, and continually improves efforts to safeguard its natural and man-made resources—from wildlife habitat to watersheds. The Conservation Element guides Scottsdale’s resource conservation efforts to provide a healthy and diverse environment for current and future generations. Topics covered in this element include natural resource management, water conservation, stormwater management, and biodiversity.

[‡ = State-required] ix Experience. Livability. Prosperity. Executive SummaryEnclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

■ Water Resources Element‡ Conservation of our most precious asset, water, occurs through decreasing use, reducing waste, and maximizing its efficient use on a daily basis. The Water Resources Element ensures that Scottsdale continues to provide safe, reliable, and quality drinking water to the community. Topics covered in this element include long-term water supply and drought preparation.

■ Energy Element‡ The goals and policies of the Energy Element seek to balance the energy needs of consumers with the sustainability of the community’s renewable and non-renewable energy sources. Topics covered in this element include energy efficiency, city facilities, and renewable energy sources.

OUTSTANDING LIVABILITY 3) Collaboration & Engagement Chapter The Collaboration & Engagement Chapter underscores the importance of community involvement to capture new ways to promote citizen involvement and engage diverse perspectives in decision-making. The community-added Community Involvement Element is included in this chapter.

■ Community Involvement Element This element serves as a building-block to strengthen ways to effectively inform and involve the community in discussions and decision-making processes. Topics covered in this element include seeking broad public input, collaborative solutions, and engagement techniques under the umbrella of civil dialogue.

[‡ = State-required]

Experience. Livability. Prosperity. x Executive Summary Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

4) Community Well-Being Chapter The Community Well-Being Chapter emphasizes the importance of health, housing, safety, and recreational opportunities in the overall well-being of the community. Three state-mandated elements, Housing, Recreation, and Safety are included in this chapter. In addition, the community added a Healthy Community Element in this chapter.

■ Healthy Community Element The Healthy Community Element seeks to maintain Scottsdale’s leadership role in health and human services, respond to the needs of families, take care of our neighbors and our elders, promote lifelong learning, and provide opportunities for youth to grow and become leaders in the future. Topics covered in this element include healthy food, health and wellness, life-long learning, supporting senior citizens, and diversity and inclusion.

■ Housing Element‡ Scottsdale is committed to the provision and preservation of housing opportunities to meet the needs of current and future residents. The Housing Element will ensure that future housing options include a wide-range of opportunities for people living and working in Scottsdale, as well as people at different life stages, income levels, and social and physical abilities. Topics covered in this element include housing context and character, fair housing, and housing choices for a variety of needs.

■ Recreation Element‡ Recreation is a part of Scottsdale’s image, provides social interaction, and promotes community well-being. Through the Recreation Element, the city’s recreational facilities and programs will provide for the leisure and fitness needs of Scottsdale’s current and future generations. Topics covered in this element include quality recreation facilities and programming.

■ Safety Element‡ Scottsdale is committed to protecting citizens and visitors from conditions, circumstances, and influences that would threaten, disrupt or diminish the quality of their lifestyles. The goals and policies of the Safety Element will ensure that the community is prepared and resilient when faced with disaster, and that our community is safe and enjoyable for all. Topics covered in this element include emergency management, transportation safety, crime prevention, and hazardous materials.

[‡ = State-required] xi Experience. Livability. Prosperity. Executive SummaryEnclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

5) Connectivity Chapter The Connectivity Chapter contains goals that promote a variety of mobility choices for the movement of people and goods throughout the community. Two State-mandated elements are included in this chapter: Circulation and Bicycling.

■ Circulation Element‡ The automobile historically has been, and will continue to be, the predominant mode of transportation in Scottsdale. However, to match the character and lifestyle of different areas and residents in the community, it is important to diversify the city’s transportation choices. The Circulation Element concentrates on accessibility, connectivity, mobility choices, and the interrelatedness of transportation and land use. Topics covered in this element include safety, multimodal choices, neighborhood needs, and school circulation.

■ Bicycling Element‡ Scottsdale is recognized as a bicycle-friendly community that actively supports bicycling and encourages residents to use bicycles as an alternative mode of transportation and as part of a healthy lifestyle. The goals and policies of the Bicycling Element provide a guide for a safe, connected, and convenient on-street and off-street bicycle networks. Topics covered in this element include bicycle networks, use, and safety.

6) Revitalization Chapter The Revitalization Chapter recognizes that the majority of future development in Scottsdale will consist of revitalization, redevelopment, and infill projects. The goals and policies in the Revitalization Chapter focus on preserving the unique qualities and character of Scottsdale’s neighborhoods, addressing the fiscal impacts of development, guiding the locations for concentrated growth and reinvestment in the city, providing public services, and allocating public facilities citywide. Six State-mandated elements are included in this chapter: Neighborhood Preservation & Revitalization; Conservation Rehabilitation & Redevelopment; Growth Areas; Cost of Development; Public Services & Facilities; and Public Buildings.

[‡ = State-required]

Experience. Livability. Prosperity. xii Executive Summary Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

■ Neighborhood Preservation & Revitalization Element‡ As Scottsdale nears build-out, the city must NEEDS TO preserve and enhance the qualities that make neighborhoods safe, special, and vibrant. The goals and policies of this element recognize that the preservation and revitalization of Scottsdale’s mature neighborhoods is critical to maintaining and strengthening the health, safety, prosperity, and enjoyment of the community. Topics covered in this element include neighborhood identity, homeownership, neighborhood safety, and neighborhood planning.

■ Conservation, Rehabilitation & Redevelopment Element‡ As a maturing city, it is increasingly important for Scottsdale to focus on the conservation and rehabilitation of matureaging properties, seek creative infill development strategies, and support context-sensitive redevelopment in areas showing signs of decline. The element addresses both “informal” and “formal” redevelopment, recognizing that any “formal” redevelopment must be approved by the City Council and conform to Arizona State Statute requirements. Topics covered in this element include context-appropriate redevelopment, economic well-being, and use of redevelopment authority.

■ Growth Areas Element‡ The Growth Areas Element identifies specific locations that are most appropriate for development focus, can accommodate future growth, or need reinvestment. Scottsdale’s Growth and Activity Areas are intended to direct high-intensity growth and development in certain locations to preserve lower-intensity and open space areas throughout the community. Topics covered in this element include development intensity and building height, multimodal connections, and growth and activity area character.

■ Cost of Development Element‡ The purpose of the Cost of Development Element is to establish goals and policies that guide the fiscal impacts created by new development or redevelopment with regard to infrastructure and public services, and determine how such impacts will be addressed. Topics covered in this element include development’s contributions to infrastructure and economic sustainability.

[‡ = State-required] xiii Experience. Livability. Prosperity. Executive SummaryEnclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

■ Public Services & Facilities Element‡ Scottsdale provides high-quality community services to its residents, businesses, and visitors. The Public Services and Facilities Element provides guidance about the provision of programs, services and physical facilities that serve to protect the health, safety, and welfare of the community. Topics covered in this element include solid waste, utilities, libraries, and community services.

■ Public Buildings Element‡ Scottsdale acknowledges the vital role that public buildings play in the shaping of community life and seeks to design facilities that represent the community’s special qualities. Libraries, community centers, schools, and cultural facilities are investments that contribute to a high quality of life for current and future generations. Topics covered in this element include public building design and locations.

COMMUNITY PROSPERITY 7) Innovation & Prosperity Chapter The Innovation & Prosperity Chapter seeks to foster the economic sustainability of the community, with focus on tourism, retention and attraction of core industries, and high-quality jobs. The Economic Vitality Element is a community-added element in this chapter. SHIMOKUBO: ■ Economic Vitality Element The city is committed to supporting and expanding its existing economic strengths through protection CONTINUED ENHANCEMENT and adaptation of Scottsdale’s tourism industry and diversification of the economic base to provide for the future fiscal health of the city, all while protecting the city’s unique southwestern character and quality of life. The goals and policies of the Economic Vitality Element emphasize compatibility, diversity, growth, and flexibility and acknowledge the economic factors that strongly influence Scottsdale’s future well-being. Topics covered in this element include tourism, economic resiliency, and fiscal sustainability.

■ TOURISM ELEMENT TOURISM IS AN INTEGRAL PART OF SCOTTSDALE’S IDENTITY AND ECONOMY, AND IT SERVES AS ONE OF THE COMMUNITY’S LEADING ECONOMIC ENGINES. THE TOURISM ELEMENT PROVIDES GOALS AND POLICIES TO FURTHER VALIDATE SCOTTSDALE AS THE PREMIER SOUTHWEST TOURISM AND SPECIAL EVENTS DESTINATION. [‡ = State-required]

Experience. Livability. Prosperity. xiv Executive Summary Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

8) Making It Happen—Implementation Establishing the goals and policies of General Plan 2035 is just the first step. The second part of the General Plan is taking action. Initial steps will include a variety of initiatives, such as the creation of Character Area Plans, to achieve specific goals for particular areas of the community; updates to the Zoning Ordinance to oversee the physical development of the city; Capital Improvement projects for the delivery of public services; and a multitude of other short- mid- and long-term programs. See the Implementation Chapter for a list of implementation programs.

Measuring Progress A community’s ability to prepare and respond to change is an indication of its resiliency and sustainability. A regular system of review, monitoring, and adjustment will measure progress towards achieving the General Plan’s short- mid- and long-term goals and policies, and ensure that the General Plan responds to emerging trends, issues, and opportunities.

Reporting Annual and five-year assessment reports will track the progress of the community in achieving the vision, values, goals, and policies of City of Scottsdale General Plan 2035.

xv Experience. Livability. Prosperity. Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

SECTION 3 - APPENDIX

254 Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

255 Appendix Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

Appendix Contents

APPENDIX 1 Abbreviations 2 Glossary 3 Related Plans and Policies 4 Maps 45 Photo Credits 56 Acknowledgements

256 Experience. Livability. Prosperity. Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3 1. ABBREVIATIONS

ACC Arts, Culture & Creative Community Element GP General Plan ADA Americans with Disabilities Act GPEC Greater Phoenix Economic Council ADEQ Arizona Department of Environmental Quality H Housing Element ADOT Arizona Department of Transportation HB House Bill (State of Arizona) ADWR Arizona Department of Water Resources HC Healthy Community Element ARS Arizona Revised Statutes HOA Home Owners Association ASLD Arizona State Land Department HUD US Department of Housing and Urban ASU Arizona State University Development B Bicycling Element ID Improvement District C Circulation Element II Infill Incentive District CAP Central Arizona Project / Character Area Plan kV Kilo Volt CC&Rs Codes, Covenants, & Restrictions LU Land Use Element CD Character & Design Element MAG Maricopa Association of Governments CDBG Community Development Block Grant NAOS Natural Area Open Space CI Community Involvement Element NPDES National Pollution Discharge Elimination System CIP Capital Improvement Plan/Program NPR Neighborhood Preservation & Revitalization CFD Community Facilities District Element COD Cost of Development Element OS Open Space Element CONSV Conservation Element PB Public Buildings Element CPTED Crime Prevention through Environmental POA Property Owners Association Design PSF Public Services & Facilities Element CRR Conservation, Rehabilitation, & Redevelopment Element R Recreation Element DNL Day/Night Average Sound Level RSB Recommended Study Boundary (of the Scottsdale McDowell Sonoran Preserve) DS&PM Design Standards and Policies Manual S Safety Element E Energy Element SB Senate Bill (State of Arizona) EP Environmental Planning Element SCC Scottsdale Community College / Scottsdale EPA US Environmental Protection Agency Cultural Council ESL Environmentally Sensitive Lands SRP Salt River Project ESLO Environmentally Sensitive Lands Ordinance S.T.E.P. Scottsdale Town Enrichment Program EV Economic Vitality Element SUSD Scottsdale Unified School District FAA Federal Aviation Administration T TOURISM ELEMENT FAR Floor Area Ratio TPC Tournament Players Club FEMA Federal Emergency Management Agency WR Water Resources Element FHA Federal Housing Administration FHWA Federal Highway Administration GA Growth Areas Element Experience. Livability. Prosperity. 257 Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3 2. GLOSSARY Aging-in-Place - The idea that people will remain in the community through all ‡- This symbol in the General Plan indicates life stages, either in their family homes, that a goal, policy, map, or sentence meets in homes to which they have moved in a State requirement for General Plans under middle or later life, or in a supported Arizona Revised Statutes 9-461.05 (NEW) accommodation of some type, such as an assisted-living facility. (NEW) A Aggregate(s) - Cinder, crushed rock or Abatement (Noise) - The method of stone, decomposed granite, gravel, pumice, reducing the degree and intensity of pumicite, and sand, which are typically noise. For Scottsdale Airport, noise mined from riverbeds and drainage areas. abatement is addressed through a series (NEW) of recommended procedures for flight Airport Influence Area - An area operations and voluntary pilot compliance. surrounding the Scottsdale Airport, as Scottsdale operates in compliance with determined in the Airport Part 150 Noise FAA standards for noise awareness and Compatibility Study, to which the Part 150’s mitigation. (NEW) Land Use Management Element applies. Acre - A measure of land containing 43,560 (NEW) square feet. Airport Part 150 Noise Compatibility Active Recreation - Leisure activities that Program (Part 150) - A voluntary noise use organized play areas including, playing compatibility study established by the FAA, fields, swimming pools, and basketball which develops and recommends actions courts. that an airport, municipalities, airlines, and the FAA could take to help reduce aircraft Activity Areas - Areas where development noise. (NEW) is concentrated, but to a lesser degree than Growth Areas. Alley - A narrow service way with public access, but not intended for general traffic Adaptive Reuse - Developing a new use for circulation. Alleys are typically found in an older building or for a building originally areas of the city that are south of Indian designed for a special or specific purpose. Bend Road, located along rear property lines, and are often used for utility access, Aesthetic - Elements in the natural or general service and circulation, garbage or created environment (including artistic trash pick-up, and maintenance. (NEW) elements) that are pleasing to the eye. The desirable appearance of place. Alternative Energy or Fuel - Energy sources that do not rely on fossil fuels, such as, Affordability, Affordable (Housing) - sunlight and wind. Housing that can be rented or purchased by a household with entry-level or “workforce” Amenity - A natural or created feature income, or spending no more than 30% that enhances the aesthetic quality, living of annual household income on housing environment, visual appeal, or makes a expenses. particular property, place, or area more attractive.

258 Experience. Livability. Prosperity. Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) Arterial Street - A road with partial control - 1990 Federal legislation specifying of access, with some at-grade intersections, provisions for design or redesign of intended to move high volumes of traffic buildings, parking, and outdoor areas to over longer distances and at higher speeds remove barriers for persons with disabilities than secondary roads. (See also: Major and guaranteeing equal access opportunity Street) to public accommodations, transportation, and government services. Assemblage; Land, Property, or Parcel - The merging of separate, adjacent Annexation - The incorporation of land parcels under one ownership to create area into an existing community with a larger-scale developments. This technique is resulting change in the boundaries of that sometimes used to prevent decline and/or community. Annexation may include newly repurpose underused properties as a part of incorporated land from county lands or revitalization or redevelopment efforts. (See land transferred from one municipality to also: Neighborhood Assemblage). (NEW) another. Assured Water Supply - A program operated Assisted-Living Facility - A health care by the Arizona Department of Water facility, other than a hospital or in-patient Resources designed to sustain the State’s nursing care facility, that provides economic health by preserving groundwater residential units, supervisory care services, resources and promoting long-term water personal care services, directed care supply planning. Before recording plats or services, or health-related services for selling parcels, developers must prove that persons who do not need inpatient nursing all State assured water supply criteria have care. Services in these facilities may been met. TO OBTAIN A DESIGNATION OF include help with daily life activities, such as ASSURED WATER SUPPLY AN ORGANIZATION dressing and bathing. (NEW) MUST PROVE PHYSICAL AND LEGAL AVAILABLE OF A 100 YEAR WATER TO Archaeological Resource - Any material SUPPLY. THE CITY OF SCOTTSDALE IS A remains of past life that are at least fifty DESIGNATED PROVIDER. (NEW) years old and of historic or pre-historic significance. B Archaeological Site - A concentration of archaeological resources in a specific BICYCLE BOULEVARDS - STREETS WITH location. LOW MOTORIZED TRAFFIC VOLUMES AND SPEEDS, DESIGNATED AND DESIGNED TO Architectural Style - A classification system GIVE BICYCLE TRAVEL PRIORITY. BICYCLE for building design primarily organized BOULEVARDS CAN USE SIGNS, PAVEMENT and defined chronologically based on MARKINGS, AND SPEED AND VOLUME the occurrence or presence of a defining MANAGEMENT MEASURES TO DISCOURAGE feature, a reflection of changing trends, THROUGH TRIPS BY MOTOR VEHICLES and emergence of new ideas, technology, AND CREATE SAFE, CONVENIENT BICYCLE or materials that make new styles possible. CROSSINGS OF BUSY ARTERIAL STREETS. Some examples of styles familiar to Scottsdale include mid-century modern, Bicycle Lane - A section of a road that is ranch style, Spanish colonial, and mission marked for exclusive bicycle use. revival. (NEW)

Experience. Livability. Prosperity. 259 Glossary Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

Bike Route - May include shared streets, Building Envelope - The outer shell of a bike lanes, or shared-use paths, in any building, typically the roof, above-grade combination for bicycle circulation. (NEW) walls, and below-grade walls. Also called building enclosure. Bikeway - A corridor designated for bicyclists that is not part of a vehicular road Building Height - Typically, the vertical or bike route, such as bicycle paths. distance from the lowest point of the structure to the highest point of the roof AS Biodiversity - The variety of plant and MEASURED ACCORDING TO SCOTTSDALE’S animal life in a particular habitat or in the ZONING ORDINANCE. Depending on the world as a whole. (NEW) specific zoning district or overlay, building Blight - The visible and physical decline height may be measured in different ways. of a property or neighborhood due to any (NEW) of the following: defective/inadequate Build-out - The point when land eligible street layout; faulty lot layout; unsanitary/ for development under the General Plan unsafe conditions; deterioration of site/ has been developed to its maximum infrastructure; tax delinquency exceeding allowed level. Build-out does not preclude fair value of land; defective title conditions; revitalization, infill, or redevelopment efforts. improper/obsolete platting; and/or conditions that endanger life or property. Built Environment - Human-made elements (NEW) including, buildings, structures, roads, canals, paths, and trails, that together Boulder - Exposed bedrock or bedrock create the physical character of an area or cluster produced by weathering. community. Buffer - An area of land separating two Business Attraction - City programs aimed distinct land uses that acts to soften or at attracting new businesses or industries to prevent the negative effects of one land the community. (NEW) use on the other. Often the buffered area is open space, landscaped areas, fences, Business Retention - City programs aimed walls, berms, or any combination of these at supporting, keeping, and sustaining things. A buffer may also be a transitional existing local businesses. land use designation between two other land uses, for example, a suburban land use that buffers a rural land use from a C commercial land use. Capital Improvement - Any building or infrastructure project that will be owned by Buffered Roadway - A road that has been a governmental unit financed, purchased, designated in the General Plan to have a or built with direct appropriations or buffered setback (of a lesser extent than a backed with public bonds. A project may Scenic Corridor) to reduce impacts a major include construction, installation, project street may have on neighboring parcels management, or supervision; project and to provide a unique image and visual planning, engineering, or design; and the aesthetic for certain streets. REFER TO purchase of land or interests in land. Some THE OPEN SPACE ELEMENT FOR VISUALLY common examples include, streets, public SIGNIFICANT ROADWAY DESIGNATION libraries, water and sewer lines, and park DEFINITIONS. (NEW) and recreation facilities.

260 Experience. Livability. Prosperity. Glossary Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

Capital Improvements Plan or Program CIRCULAR ECONOMY - AN ECONOMIC (CIP) - A plan for the purchase, installation, SYSTEM AIMED AT ELIMINATING WASTE design, and construction of capital AND THE CONTINUAL USE OF RESOURCES improvements that includes a prioritized BY EMPLOYING REUSE, SHARING, REPAIR, listing of projects, their timing, phasing, and REFURBISHMENT, REMANUFACTURING, related costs. AND RECYCLING TO MINIMIZE THE USE OF RESOURCES AND THE CREATION OF WASTE, Carpooling - Two to four persons commuting POLLUTION, AND CARBON EMISSIONS. in a motor vehicle to or from a destination in a privately owned vehicle. (See Also: Trip Citizen, Community, or Public SHIMOKUBO: Reduction) Participation, Community Involvement, Public Outreach - An open process in Central Arizona Project (CAP) - The 336- which the rights of the community AND mile long aqueduct system constructed to ITS CITIZENS to be informed, be involved, deliver water from the Colorado River into comment, and receive response from city central and southern Arizona. government are met through a wide range of Central Business District (CBD) - A single, methods and opportunities. (See also: Civil Dialogue) contiguous geographic area that may be SHIMOKUBO: designated by the City Council if it meets CITIZEN SURVEY - THE CITY OF SCOTTSDALE the following State requirements: 1) located PARTICIPATES IN THE NATIONAL CITIZENS within a slum or blighted area; and 2) SURVEY BY RANDOMLY SELECTING geographically compact and no larger than SCOTTSDALE RESIDENTS, EVERY OTHER five (5) percent of the total land area of YEAR, TO MEASURE THEIR VIEWS ON the city, or 640 acres. The State allows the THE COMMUNITY AND CITY PROGRAMS city to abate tax for government property AND SERVICES. FEEDBACK PROVIDED improvements within the Central Business VIA THE SURVEY IS USED TO MEASURE District for a limited period of time. THE QUALITY OF CITY SERVICES AND IS Character - Unique features, qualities, and CONSIDERED IN PRIORITIZING PROGRAMS attributes that identify a place. Urban design AND SERVICES. BECAUSE SIMILAR SURVEYS is concerned with the use of character to ARE CONDUCTED IN HUNDREDS OF distinguish place or relate places to one JURISDICTIONS, SCOTTSDALE CAN ALSO another. (NEW) COMPARE ITS RESULTS WITH OTHER CITIES ACROSS THE COUNTRY. Character Area Plan (CAP) - The second level of Scottsdale’s three-level General City Charter - The document that outlines Plan structure that guides more detailed the city government’s structure, processes, planning, land use, and character for a powers, and limitations. defined sub-area of the city. City Council - A seven-member elected Character Type - A designation in the body of Scottsdale residents responsible Character & Design Element that describes for governing the city and making policy, the general pattern, form, and intensity legislative, and regulatory decisions about of development. See Character & Design the provision of city services and resolution Element for descriptions of each Character of civic issues. Type in Scottsdale. (NEW)

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CityShape 2020 - A public education and Community Center - A facility that provides outreach process conducted between 1994 public services for residents, including and 1996, which involved a comprehensive recreational and cultural services, and services review and update of Scottsdale’s General for youth or seniors. Plan as an expression of Scottsdale’s Shared Vision. The process established the Community Development Block Grant three-tiered General Plan structure and Six (CDBG) - Grant program administered by Guiding Principles for use in making decisions the US Department of Housing and Urban on planning-related issues. Development (HUD). Grants must primarily be used to help low-income households with Civil Dialogue - Discussion between parties emphasis on housing and public improvement to enhance understanding; advance the projects. public’s interests; further individual dignity; and improve society. Civil dialogue is generally Community Facilities District (CFD) - A robust, honest, frank, and constructive special taxing district used for financing the dialogue. It includes a willingness to explain installation, operations, and maintenance of respectfully the reasons behind one’s public facilities through the sale of General opinions and to listen and understand the Obligation and other government-backed opposing side’s reasons. Civil dialogue bonds. CFDs are used by developers of both provides a safe environment for different residential and commercial projects for points of view to be expressed and evaluated. costly infrastructure improvements and also (See also: Citizen or Public Participation) used for community-initiated programs. The (NEW) bonds associated with a CFD become the responsibility of the property owners who Clustering - Essentially any development benefit from the infrastructure improvements. approach that locates buildings in limited areas on a site and results in a more compact Community Member or Citizen - A person who arrangement of buildings on a property. This lives, works, or owns property in Scottsdale. allows the remaining land to be used for open Community Park - Park located in a space and creates larger blocks of connected centralized area in relation to a group of open space instead of smaller, individual neighborhoods or major parts of the city. areas. Community parks accommodate large Cogeneration - Also called Combined groups; generally feature a community Heat and Power (CHP), the simultaneous center and lighted recreational amenities; production of electricity and heat from are often located next to elementary, middle a single fuel source, such as natural or high schools; and are accessed mainly by gas, biomass, coal, waste heat, or oil. automobiles and bicycles. (NEW) Cogeneration provides onsite generation of Community Policing - A public safety strategy electrical or mechanical power; waste-heat that focuses on local law enforcement building recovery for heating, cooling, or process ties and working closely with members of applications; and seamless integration for a a community or neighborhood. Community variety of technologies, applications, and fuel policing promotes partnerships and types. (NEW) neighborhood problem-solving techniques to Collector Street - A secondary street used for proactively address the immediate conditions TO CONNECT local neighborhood traffic to exit that cause crime, social disorder, and fear of or enter the neighborhoodMAJOR STREETS. crime. (NEW) 262 Experience. Livability. Prosperity. Glossary Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

Community Rating System - The Federal Corridor - A linear pattern of similar land uses Emergency Management Agency’s (FEMA) (e.g. commercial or open space corridor); a system for recognizing and encouraging major transportation route, including freeways, community floodplain management beyond expressways, arterials, or transit lines; or any the minimum National Flood Insurance major utility route, such as transmission lines Program (NFIP) standards. (NEW) or canals. (See also: Vista Corridor, Scenic Corridor, and Wildlife Corridor) Compact Development - Development designed to use less land than conventional Creative Placemaking - Strategically shaping development. (NEW) the physical and social character of a neighborhood, area, city, or region around arts Conservation - (1) The controlled use and cultural activities through public, private, and systematic protection of a resource, not-for-profit, and community partnerships. including environmental or cultural (See also: Placemaking) (NEW) resources; or (2) To use something sparingly so as not to exhaust supplies. Creative Workforce - Employees or workers (See also: Preserve, Preservation, WATER with expertise or occupations involving a high CONSERVATION and Conservation, level of creative thinking, including developing, Neighborhood) (NEW) designing, or creating new applications, ideas, relationships, systems or products, and artistic Conservation, Neighborhood - A process contributions. (NEW) that seeks to maintain significant character- defining features of a neighborhood, such Crime Prevention Through Environmental as lot size, lot coverage, building height, and Design (CPTED) - A multi-disciplinary approach streetscapes. (See also: Conservation and to deterring criminal behavior through design of Historic Preservation) (NEW) the built environment. (NEW) Context - The relationship between a Cultural Resource(s) - Any building site, location and its surrounding natural, district, structure, or object significant in planned, permitted, and/or built history, architecture, archaeology, culture, environment; the whole environment or science. This can extend to include the relevant to a particular building or place; the community’s heritage and way of life. (See also: interrelated conditions in which something Archaelogical Resource and Historic Site or exists or occurs. (NEW) Resource) (NEW) Conveyance (Water) - The distribution of water using natural and constructed D systems, such as pipelines, pumps, and Density - Usually used to describe the canals. (NEW) number of housing units per acre of land in Continuous Open Space - A system of residential districts. Density is sometimes linked, interconnected open spaces, used interchangeably with intensity. Intensity is including trails, WASHES (INCLUSIVE OF the relative measure of development impact, Vista Corridors), streetscapes, TRAILS, and as defined by characteristics such as traffic canals. (NEW) generation, floor area ratio, and lot coverage, or the concentration of activity occurring on a site or in an area. (See also: Intensity)

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Desert Scenic Roadway - A road designated Development Fee - One-time capital in the General Plan to have an open space charges, typically to developers, to fund buffer (of a lesser extent than a Scenic the construction of public facilities needed Corridor or Buffered Roadway) to maintain to accommodate new development. and enhance open space along roads in Arizona State law requires all municipal Environmentally Sensitive Lands. REFER TO fee structures to be based on adopted THE OPEN SPACE ELEMENT FOR VISUALLY Land Use Assumptions and Infrastructure SIGNIFICANT ROADWAY DESIGNATION Improvements Plan Reports, which DEFINITIONS. (NEW) describe existing infrastructure, available capacity, planning, and cost estimates Design Guidelines - Non-mandatory for new infrastructure required to serve provisions that steer the design of buildings development. Sometimes called an Impact and are used by staff, the city’s boards and Fee. (NEW) commissions, and City Council for evaluating projects. Design guidelines are usually Development Project, Project - Any applied in a particular area or to a particular development resulting from the approval use to protect investment or establish a of a building permit, lot split, preliminary unifying look for an area. Typical guidelines or final plat, rezoning application, grading might focus on building orientation, permit, public or private infrastructure, architectural details, and streetscape variance requests, development review, considerations. master plans, native plant removal, relocation or re-vegetation, or use permit. Developed Open Space - Generally landscape areas, turf areas, parks, golf Development Regulations - Scottsdale’s courses, and other outdoor recreational Zoning Ordinance, Land Division Ordinance, facilities intended for both passive and and other regulations, that regulate active recreation. Refer to the Land Use particular development factors, including Element for the Developed Open Space the type of land use, densities, height and Land Use Category definition and the Open bulk, landscaping, parking requirements, Space Element for the primary open space some elements of design, and standards for type definitions.(NEW) street layout and design. (See also: Zoning) Developer - A property owner, partnership, Development Review - A process involving company, or corporation which owns or has the review of all aspects of a proposed authorization to develop or redevelop a development, including the site plan, property. the relationship of development to the surrounding area, and carrying out Development - The physical extension or character and design related goals and construction of land uses. Development policies of the General Plan. The Scottsdale includes subdivision of land; construction Development Review Board oversees the or alteration of structures, roads, utilities, development review process. and other facilities; installation of water and sewer systems; grading; deposit of refuse, debris, or fill; and clearing of vegetative cover.

264 Experience. Livability. Prosperity. Glossary Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

Development Review Board - A decision- Dwelling Unit (DU) - A house or apartment making citizen board, consisting of a City that is a separate and independent Council member, a Planning Commissioner, housekeeping unit, occupied or intended for and five (5) appointed professional occupancy by one household. members, that oversees the development review process. THE DEVELOPMENT REVIEW BOARD REVIEWS ALL ASPECTS OF THE E PROPOSED DESIGN OF A DEVELOPMENT Early Notification - A procedure to allow INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, SITE neighborhood associations, business PLANNING AND THE RELATIONSHIP OF THE groups, and affected residents to review DEVELOPMENT TO THE SURROUNDING project applications before they are ENVIRONMENT AND THE COMMUNITY. scheduled for public hearings. Development Site, Site - A specific area of Easement - The right to use property owned a development project proposed for a zone, by another for designated purposes, such use, or density. as access to another piece of property, conveyance of stormwater, or transmission Distributed Generation - Using small of utilities. sources of electrical power, such as solar, micro-turbines, fuel cells, or other Economic Sector - A specific industry or generating devices, at designated sites group of interconnected industries. to meet individual customer energy load. These sources (i.e. generators) are sized Ecosystem - Living and non-living to match a specific load, such as a house, elements that interact to form a complete industry, or community. (NEW) environmental unit. (NEW) Drainage - Surface water runoff or the Effluent - Wastewater, treated or untreated, removal of surface water or groundwater that flows out of a treatment plant, sewer, from land by drains, grading, or other or industrial outfall. (See also: Wastewater) means, which includes runoff controls to (NEW) minimize erosion and sedimentation during Element (General Plan) - A piece of and after construction or development. (See the General Plan focused on a specific also: Stormwater, Stormwater Runoff) topic, such as open space or land use. Drought Management Plan - The City of State law requires the General Plan to Scottsdale Water Resources Department include seventeen (17) elements, and management program of responses to allows for other elements to be identified drought AND/OR SHORTAGE conditions. by the community. Scottsdale’s General (NEW) Plan includes twenty-two (22) elements organized into seven (7) chapters. Drought - Three or more consecutive years of less-than-average rainfall. (NEW) Employment Center, or Core - Generally, a relatively large area of the city dominated by Dwelling - Any building, or part of a building, office, high-technology, light industrial, and designed and used exclusively for residential other job-generating land uses. Refer to the purposes; includes live/work and mixed-use Land Use Element for the Employment Land buildings. (NEW) Use Category definition.

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Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) - Floor Area Ratio (FAR) - A measure of Federal agency charged with protecting the development intensity, typically described in environment. the Zoning Ordinance, that is expressed by the ratio of gross building floor area to net Endangered Species - As designated by the lot area of a site. Federal Government, a species of animal or plant with prospects for survival and Floodplain - The channel and the relatively reproduction in immediate jeopardy. (NEW) flat area adjoining the channel of a natural stream or river that has been or may be Entry-Level Household - A person or family covered by floodwater. that can afford to purchase a home for the first time.(NEW) Floodplain(s), 100-year - Land predicted to flood during a 100-year storm, which has a Environmentally Sensitive Lands (ESL) - 1% chance of occurring in any given year. Land in Scottsdale with unique and sensitive (NEW) natural features, including mountains and hills, large rock formations, native Fossil Fuels - Buried, combustible geologic landscapes, archeological and historical deposits of organic materials, formed from sites, significant washes, and land with decayed plants and animals, that have been special hazards. (NEW) converted to crude oil, coal, natural gas, or heavy oils by exposure to heat and pressure Environmentally Sensitive Lands in the earth’s crust over millions of years. Ordinance (ESLO) - A set of zoning Fossil fuels are generally considered “non- regulations originally adopted by the City renewable” energy sources. (NEW) of Scottsdale in 1991 (and subsequently revised) to guide future development in the Freeway - Major road with controlled access desert and mountain areas of Scottsdale. devoted exclusively to traffic movement, The Ordinance includes standards to ensure mainly of a through or regional nature. Local that new construction will be compatible examples include the Pima Freeway (SR with the natural beauty of the area. 101) and the Red Mountain Freeway (SR 202). Equestrian - Relating to horses, horseback riding, or people who ride horses. (NEW) Frontage - The part of a lot that touches a road, street, or watercourse. It is often described by a measure of distance or F length in linear feet such as “60 feet of Fair Housing - The right to choose housing frontage.” free from unlawful discrimination. (NEW) Federal Emergency Management Agency G (FEMA) - A federal agency responsible for Gateway - A point along a street where a coordination of disaster preparedness, motorist or pedestrian gains a sense of response and recovery efforts, as well as, arrival into the city or a particular area, the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) typically through signs, monuments, and flood hazard mapping. (NEW) landscaping, change in development Flood Control - Any structural or character, or a natural feature. non-structural measures designed to divert or contain floodwater and prevent flooding. 266 Experience. Livability. Prosperity. Glossary Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

General Plan [Arizona Revised Statutes] - A Geologic Hazard - Any public safety hazard municipal statement of land development associated with geologic forces, including policies, that may include maps, charts, landslides, mudslides, rock slides, erosion, graphs and text that set forth objectives, and sedimentation. principles and standards for local growth and redevelopment enacted under the Grade Separation - Crossing facilities, provisions of this article [ARS 9-461] or any including overpasses, underpasses, prior statute. (NEW) skywalks, or tunnels, that allow pedestrians and motor vehicles to cross a street at General Plan - The Scottsdale General Plan different elevations. (NEW) is a comprehensive, long-range plan for the development of the municipality consisting Gray Water - Wastewater collected of community goals and development separately from sewage that may contain policies setting forth objectives, principles fats, oils, grease, hair, lint, soaps, cleansers, and standards for the state mandated fabric softeners, and other chemicals. Gray elements of land use, circulation, open water originates from a clothes washer, space, growth areas, environmental bathtub, shower or sink, but not from a planning, cost of development, water kitchen sink, dishwasher, or toilet and may resources, conservation (natural resources), contain elevated levels of chlorides, sodium, recreation, public services and facilities, borax, and sulfates. Gray water differs from public buildings, housing, conservation, “black water,” which may be contaminated rehabilitation and redevelopment, safety, by bacteria, viruses, and other pathogens, bicycling, energy, and neighborhood from toilets, kitchen sinks, and dishwashers. preservation and revitalization. In addition, (NEW) THE Scottsdale’s General Plan includes Green Building - The practice of increasing community-created elements for economic the efficiency of building resource use, vitality, character and design, COMMUNITY including energy, water, and materials, INVOLVEMENT, arts and culture, TOURISM, while also reducing negative effects on and a healthy community. A collection of human health and the environment during goals and policies that guide decision- the building’s lifecycle through site layout, making about the evolution of the city. The building design, construction, operation, General Plan provides a comprehensive, maintenance, and removal. (NEW) coordinated set of directions for the development of the city, including land Green Building Program - The Green use, transportation, economic conditions, Building Program is a voluntary building environment, infrastructure, public facilities, initiative for the development community and physical character. including homeowners and building users in Scottsdale that are interested in living, General Plan Amendment - A formal City working, worshiping, socializing, and Council change to the text or maps of the entertaining in environmentally compatible, General Plan. Per State Statute, a change healthy buildings. The program encourages to the General Plan is considered a Major environmentally responsible building Amendment if it is “a substantial alteration techniques, materials, and processes. of the municipality’s land use mixture or balance as established in the Land Use Groundwater - Water under the earth’s Element.” All amendments must meet surface, often confined to aquifers, capable certain requirements in the Land Use of supplying wells and springs. Element. Experience. Livability. Prosperity. 267 Glossary Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

Growing Smarter Act - 1998 State High-Density - A relative term, which may vary legislation governing long-range planning depending on the surrounding context, usually activities in Arizona cities and towns used to describe development dominated by focused on a community’s General Plan. multi-family housing, or areas of more than This legislation discusses the content, eight (8) dwelling units to an acre of land. organization, amendment procedures, public involvement, notification Historic Preservation - Private or public requirements, 10-year update or identification and protection of physical re-adoption, and other procedural and resources in the built environment of local, material requirements. State, or national significance. The term can also refer to the process of maintaining Growing Smarter Plus ACT - 2000 State resources as they were originally designed legislation that amended the original 1998 and built and preventing more deterioration. Growing Smarter Act. Growing Smarter Plus redefined major amendments to the Historic Resource - Any prehistoric or historic General Plan and required that General Plan district, site, building, structure, object, or adoptions be ratified by a public vote after landmark included in, or eligible for inclusion City Council approval. on, the National Register of Historic Places, the Arizona Register of Historic Places, or Growth Areas - Areas of the community that the Scottsdale Historic Register; including best accommodate future growth allowing artifacts, records, and material remains increased focus on creating or enhancing related to such property or resource. Historic transportation systems and infrastructure Resources include archaeological resources. coordinated with development activity. (See also: Archaeological Resource and Cultural Resource) H Historic Register, Scottsdale - Refers to the official list of resources in the community Habitat - The physical location or type that have been designated Historic Property of environment in which an organism or (HP) overlay zoning district and have been biological population lives or occurs. placed on the Scottsdale Historic Register Hazardous Material or Waste - A substance by City Council after a local public hearing that could be harmful to people, animals, process. The list of resources may include plants, and the environment, including archaeological sites. pesticides, herbicides, poisons, toxic metals Homeowners’ Association (HOA) - An and chemicals, liquefied natural gas, organization initially established by explosives, volatile chemicals, and nuclear developers of residential subdivisions. Control fuels. of the entity is transitioned to a board of Heat Island - The phenomenon involving home owners. An HOA is typically responsible elevated temperatures in urban/suburban for administration of the subdivision’s codes, areas as compared with outlying rural/ covenants and restrictions (CC&Rs), and other undeveloped surroundings. Heat islands property controls for maintaining a safe and are generally caused by reduced vegetation, quality environment and design uniformity. solar heat absorption, material heat Most neighborhoods built in Scottsdale after capacity, use of energy, and building 1980 have HOAs. (NEW) spacing. (NEW)

268 Experience. Livability. Prosperity. Glossary Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

Household Hazardous Waste - Waste that Improvement - 1) a change or addition is generated in the home that is toxic or by which something is made better; or 2) hazardous to humans and the environment something done or added to real property, when discarded, including paint, motor oil, such as installation of infrastructure batteries, and household cleaning products. or landscaping, that increases the property’s value; OR 3) THE UPGRADE OR Human-Scale - The proportional REPLACEMENT OF AN EXISTING UTILITY OR relationship of the physical environment OTHER PUBLIC INFRASTRUCTURE. (NEW) to human dimensions in terms of bulk and massing of buildings or other features. An Improvement District - A designated area example of human-scale development is a of the city with specific boundaries that multiple-story building with retail stores on is assessed the costs of certain public the ground floor that provide visual interest improvements, including street paving, at human-eye level using window displays sidewalks, crosswalks, curbs, gutters, and architectural features. (NEW) culverts, bridges, fire hydrants, sewers, power lines, water lines, and street lighting. Human Services - An integrated system of (Refer to the Cost of Development Element social services, resources, and opportunities for more information about improvement to help people improve their lives, the lives districts) of others, neighborhoods, and the total community. (NEW) Industrial Pretreatment Program - The act of treating wastewater to remove any harmful PERMITTING AND ENFORCING OF I REGULATORY STANDARDS TO IDENTIFY, Identity of Place - The meaning and REDUCE, OR PREVENT COMMERCIAL AND significance people individually or INDUSTRIAL pollutants before it enters collectively assign to a place. Identity FROM DISCHARGING INTO THE publicly is influenced by physical aspects of a owned treatment worksPLAN. (NEW) geographic location and its unique historic Infill, Infill Development - Development of and cultural associations. Place identity has individual vacant lots or “leftover” vacant evolved as a planning concern in response properties in areas already developed with to a loss of individuality and distinctiveness access to services and infrastructure. as represented by uniformity in design. (NEW) Impact Fee - See Development Fee Implementation - In the context of the General Plan, implementation is an action, procedure, program, or technique that carries out General Plan goals and policies. For example, the Parks and Recreation Master Plan implements the goals and policies of the Open Space and Recreation Elements.

Experience. Livability. Prosperity. 269 Glossary Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

Infill Incentive District - An optional implementation tool allowed by the State L of Arizona to encourage infill development Land Subsidence - Sinking or downward in particular locations that meet statutory settling of the earth’s surface, not restricted criteria. This tool recognizes that the in rate, magnitude, or area involved. strategic application of zoning district Subsidence may be caused by natural standards and regulations might inhibit geologic processes, such as solution, infill, revitalization, and redevelopment and compaction, or withdrawal of fluid lava from otherwise preclude the provision of public beneath a solid crust. Human activity such amenities and benefits. An Infill Incentive as subsurface mining or the pumping of oil District is a regulatory mechanism and is or groundwater may also cause subsidence. different from general infill development. (NEW) Refer to the Land Use Element for the Infill Incentive District Overlay Land Use Category Land Use Definitions - Descriptions, definition. (See also: Infill)(NEW) including generalized densities, of each land use category in the Land Use Element that In-Lieu Fee - Cash payments that may be correspond to the categories on the Future required of an owner or developer as a Land Use map. substitute for dedication of land or physical improvements. (Future) Land Use Map - A map in the General Plan Land Use Element that Infrastructure - Public services and illustrates the general, planned distribution facilities, including sewage disposal of land uses and intensities. It visually systems, water supply systems, other utility discerns land use compatibility and spatial systems, streets and roads, parks, and relationships, establishes the physical form schools. of the community, and identifies urban Intensity - The level or concentration of design opportunities. A land use map serves activity occurring on a site or in an area. as a guide in the preparation of zoning Intensity is often used interchangeably with ordinances and zoning district maps. density. (See also: Floor Area Ratio and Livability - The balance of elements in the Density) physical environment that contribute to the Invasive Species - A plant, animal, or physical, social, economic, political, and microbial species introduced into an area emotional well-being of residents. accidently or unknowingly that may adapt, Low-Density - A relative term, which may thrive, and aggressively spread, stressing vary depending on the surrounding context, indigenous and balanced ecosystems. usually used to describe development (NEW) dominated by large-lot, single-family housing, or areas of one dwelling unit to one J or more acres. (NEW) K SHIMOKUBO: SHOULD WE ADD “LIGHT INDUSTRIAL” TO THE GLOSSARY?

270 Experience. Livability. Prosperity. Glossary Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

Low-Impact Infrastructure, Green Mixed-Use - Generally, a development type Infrastructure - An approach to stormwater in which complementary and integrated management that mimics the natural uses, such as office, retail, resorts, and hydrology of a site and uses captured residential, are combined in the same stormwater run-off. This contrasts with building (vertical mixed-use) or within conventional methods that convey separate buildings on the same site or stormwater offsite as quickly as possible to nearby sites (horizontal mixed-use). Refer regional drainage facilities. The low-impact to the Land Use Element for the Mixed model views stormwater as a resource, Use Neighborhoods Land Use Category reduces stormwater runoff, uses natural definition. systems for filtration, and helps protect ecologically sensitive areas within a Mode, Modal - The form or method of travel development. (NEW) distinguished by vehicle type, operation, technology, and rights-of-way separation. M (NEW) Moderate or Medium-Density - A relative Major Street - In the General Plan, an term, which may vary depending on the arterial street or freeway. Depending on surrounding context, usually used to context, such as in a Growth Area, major describe development dominated by a collector streets may be considered major variety of single-family, two-family, or streets. multi-family housing developments, or areas between more than one and eight dwelling Mass, Massing - The height, width, and units to an acre of land. (NEW) depth of a building or structure. Multi-Family Housing - 1) A building, or part Master-Planned Community - A designed of a building, designed for occupancy by grouping of various compatible land uses, three (3) or more families; or 2) A housing such as housing, recreation, shopping variety associated with high- and moderate- centers, and industrial parks, within one density development within Suburban, contained development or subdivision. Urban, and Mixed-Use Neighborhood land (NEW) uses. Multi-family housing may be owner or (Scottsdale) McDowell Sonoran Preserve renter occupied. (NEW) - A permanently protected preserve of Multimodal - An approach to transportation Sonoran Desert and mountains with the that includes all users (i.e. pedestrians, purpose of maintaining scenic views, bicyclists, transit vehicle, equestrians, and protecting wildlife and desert plant habitat, motorists) of all ages and abilities and aims and preserving archaeological and historical to create comprehensive, integrated, and resources and sites, while providing public connected transportation network. access for educational and passive outdoor recreational opportunities. Upon completion, Scottsdale’s Preserve will consist of about one-third of the city’s land mass. (NEW)

Experience. Livability. Prosperity. 271 Glossary Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

Natural Resource - A feature or N phenomenon in nature that enhances the National Register of Historic Places - The quality of human life, including land, water, Federal list of properties identified as worthy air, vegetation, geology, animal habitat, and of preservation. Properties may be listed on topography. (NEW) the register or may be identified as being Neighborhood - A part of the city defined “eligible” or “potentially eligible.” Properties by characteristics that may include distinct are usually listed in the National Register ethnic or economic characteristics, housing through nominations by the State Office of types, schools, vicinity of a notable feature Historic Preservation (SHPO). or landmark. Boundaries may be defined by National Pollution POLLUTANT Discharge physical barriers, such as major highways Elimination System (NPDES) - Authorized by or natural features. Neighborhoods are the Clean Water Act, the National Pollutant often self-defined by the residents, property Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) owners, and tenants or by homeowner and/ permit program controls water pollution or business associations. by regulating sources of pollution that For the purposes of the General Plan, unless discharge into waters of the United States. otherwise described, neighborhoods are not (NEW) exclusively residential or made up of a single Native Plants - Plants indigenous to an housing type (i.e. single family, residential, area or from a similar climate and requiring or mixed use). The term “neighborhood” in little or no supplemental irrigation once its general use includes supporting uses established. such as shopping, schools, and places of worship and employment. Natural Area Open Space (NAOS) - Areas of undisturbed or restored natural desert, with Neighborhood Assemblage - The process no man-made construction, and dedicated in which the owners of several properties under the Environmentally Sensitive Lands in a neighborhood seek a buyer for Ordinance (ESLO). Natural Area Open Space their collective properties, or when a is regulated by the Zoning Ordinancebut may developer interested in a neighborhood for include revegetated areas. (NEW) redevelopment seeks to put all properties under contract (also called a “buyout”). Natural Open Space - Generally, an open Neighborhood assemblages most often space area that has largely maintained its occur where land values may be increasing, natural environmental character, or has such as near transportation improvements had its character restored with minimal or near new office or commercial man-made facilities. Natural open space developments. The city has a Neighborhood may include structures for wildlife and plant Assemblage Policy (Resolution 3157, May habitat and passive recreation purposes. 15, 1989) to help guide assemblage. (See (Refer to the Land Use Element for the also: Assemblage; Land, Property or Parcel) Natural Open Space Land Use Category (NEW) definition) AND THE OPEN SPACE ELEMENT FOR THE PRIMARY OPEN SPACE TYPE DEFINITIONS. (NEW)

272 Experience. Livability. Prosperity. Glossary Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

Neighborhood Park - Park of roughly two (2) to ten (10) acres in size, intended to O meet the recreation needs of people living Downtown OLD TOWN- In Scottsdale, the or working within a one-half mile radius. commercial, cultural, civic, and symbolic Neighborhood parks provide primary center of the community consisting of a recreation services and facilities; are easily vital mix of supporting land uses. OLD accessible and available to local residents; TOWN Scottsdale’s Downtown is about two serve a single neighborhood or several (2) square miles located generally south of neighborhoods, depending on the location Chaparral Road, west of Road, north of of the park; are preferably located with or Earll Drive, and east of 68th Street. next to elementary schools, neighborhood centers, or other gathering places; and Open Space - Any parcel or area of water are accessed mainly by pedestrians and or land that is essentially unimproved bicycles. and devoted to an open space use for the purpose of (1) the preservation of natural Neighborhood Plan - The third level of resources; (2) the managed production of Scottsdale planning. A neighborhood resources; (3) outdoor recreation; or (4) plan is a guide and framework for public health and safety. neighborhood decision-making. It includes broad statements about Open Space, Common - Land within or resident goals, preferences, and values related to a development that is designed for the neighborhood. It also contains and intended for the common use or recommendations for carrying out the goals enjoyment of the residents, and not and generally represents the consensus of individually owned or dedicated for public the neighborhood. use. Neighborhood Street, Local Street - A Open Space, Useable - Open space, which road that provides access to properties in because of its size, function, visibility, a neighborhood. Not intended for through accessibility, and strategic location, is a traffic or heavy traffic loads. community amenity or resource. (NEW) Net-Zero Energy - The practice of Ordinance - A city-adopted law or regulation. producing as much energy as is consumed Overlay Land Use Category - A supplemental by off-setting energy use through a land use designation relating to the use or combination of energy efficiency and potential use of an area that differs or varies renewable power. (NEW) from the standards, requirements, and Noise - Any undesired audible sound, permitted uses associated with the base or especially one that is loud or disagreeable. underlying land use designation. (NEW) Non-Residential Land Use - Any of a Overlay Zoning District - A method used to broad category of land use that does not apply supplemental zoning provisions to a contain housing, including, but not limited specific area’s underlying or base zoning. to, commercial, industrial, public, and An overlay zone might restrict certain uses institutional uses. (NEW) or allow higher densities than would be permitted in the same zone in other parts of Non-Renewable Resource - Natural the city. The Environmentally Sensitive Lands resources, such as fossil fuels and natural Ordinance district is an overlay zoning district. gas, that cannot be replaced once used. Experience. Livability. Prosperity. 273 Glossary Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

Planning Agency - Per Ordinance 3956 P (August 2011), the agency of the City of Parcel - A legally defined lot, or contiguous Scottsdale, consisting of the Department group of lots, in single ownership or under of Planning and the Department of Public single control, and considered a unit for Works, with the duty of administering purposes of development and open space the General Plan, as allowed per Arizona calculation. Revised Statutes 9-461.01. (NEW) Park - A tract of land designated and Planning Commission - Seven (7) member used by the public for active and passive citizen commission responsible for reviewing recreation. and making recommendations to the City Council on proposals for development, Park-and-Ride - A parking lot designed for the subdivision of land, amendments to drivers to leave their cars and use mass zoning, land use studies, the annual Capital transit facilities beginning, ending, or Improvement Program, the General Plan, stopping at the park-and-ride facility. and other development regulations. Particulate Air Pollution - A mixture of large Preserve, Preservation - To keep something and fine solid particles and liquid droplets protected from anything that would cause its found in the air. (NEW) quality or condition to change or deteriorate. (See also: (Scottsdale) McDowell Sonoran Passive Recreation - Leisure activities Preserve, Conservation, and Historic that involve less energetic, individual, or Preservation) (NEW) non-organized (i.e. team) activities, such as walking, horseback riding, running, sitting, PRESERVE SCENIC BUFFER - A ROAD hiking, skateboarding, picnicking, card and DESIGNATED IN THE GENERAL PLAN TO board games, or simply enjoying the natural HAVE AN OPEN SPACE BUFFER (OF A environment. LESSER EXTENT THAN A SCENIC CORRIDOR) TO MAINTAIN AND ENHANCE OPEN SPACE Path, Pathway - A paved, shared-use, ALONG STREETS WITHIN AND ADJACENT TO pedestrian, equestrian, or cyclist route or THE RECOMMENDED STUDY BOUNDARY system. (RSB) OF THE SCOTTSDALE MCDOWELL Pedestrian-Oriented - A form of SONORAN PRESERVE. REFER TO THE development that makes the street OPEN SPACE ELEMENT FOR VISUALLY environment inviting for pedestrians. SIGNIFICANT ROADWAY DESIGNATION DEFINITIONS. (NEW) Placemaking - A multi-faceted approach to the planning, design, and management Public Art - Sculpture, painting, murals, and of public spaces that emphasizes a local other forms of artwork that are placed in community’s assets, and creating public public spaces or in public view to enrich and spaces that foster people’s health and add visual interest to the built environment. well-being and give a place an identity. Public Hearing - A meeting of a board, (NEW) commission, or City Council that has been announced and advertised in advance, is open to the public, and during which the public is given an opportunity to talk and participate.

274 Experience. Livability. Prosperity. Glossary Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

Public Notification - The advertisement Recommended Study Boundary (RSB) of a public hearing in a newspaper of of the Scottsdale Mcdowell Sonoran general circulation, and through other Preserve - The Recommended Study media sources describing time, place, and Boundary (RSB) of the Scottsdale McDowell nature of the public hearing and where Sonoran Preserve correlates with the land the application and documents may be area the city desires to ultimately acquire inspected. through the preservation program and is the geographic area for which the Scottsdale Public/Private Partnership - A merging of voters approved the use of tax proceeds public and private resources to achieve an to purchase and maintain land for the end result or product that would be difficult Scottsdale McDowell Sonoran Preserve. to achieve through public or private activity alone. Reclaimed Water - Former Wastewater that is treated to remove solids and certain Public Use - Any building or property that impurities to a level that is suitable for serves a public function including, schools, use in landscaping, and water features, libraries, City Hall, post offices, police and IRRIGATION, AND NON-POTABLE PURPOSES fire stations, and recreational and cultural as determined by the Water Resources facilities. Department. (NEW) Recreational Facility - A place designed Q and equipped for sports and leisure Quasi-Governmental, Quasi-Public - A activities. private entity involved in the delivery of an Recycled Water - The practice of using highly essential governmental service or required treated effluent water from a wastewater government program. (NEW) treatment plant for landscape irrigation and other non-drinking purposes. R Recycling - The process by which waste Rare Species - As designated by the Federal products are collected, separated, and Government, an organism, plant or animal, reused or reduced to raw materials and that is uncommon, scarce, or infrequently transformed into new and often different encountered. (NEW) products. Recharge, Groundwater - The NATURAL OR Redevelop, (Informal) Redevelopment - To HUMAN-INDUCED process of infiltration and change the existing development in an area percolation of rainwater, SURFACE WATER, or on a property, sometimes by demolishing or treated wastewater, from land areas, existing building; increasing the overall or streams, OR ENGINEERED METHODS floor area existing on a property; or both. through permeable soils into aquifers that Sometimes this also involves a change in provide underground storage. land use. (See also: Infill)(NEW)

Experience. Livability. Prosperity. 275 Glossary Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

Redevelopment Authority, Formal Resort Corridor - The Resort Corridor Redevelopment - Refers to powers and tools consists of medium to low intensity granted by the State of Arizona to cities for development and exists along Scottsdale the purpose of protecting the health, safety, Road between East Highland Drive and and welfare of citizens by improvement of Indian Bend Road. This corridor contains a deteriorated urban conditions, acquiring mixture of land use classifications including property, and establishing open space mixed-use neighborhood and other uses and infrastructure. The use of these that support, maintain, enhance, and powers is limited to areas that are formally expand hospitality/tourism land uses. (NEW) designated for redevelopment and under a redevelopment plan formally adopted by Retail - A place of business in which the City Council, which includes goals and merchandise is sold to consumers. (NEW) policies that indicate the intent of plan. Revitalization - Bringing new life or vigor to (NEW) an area, often through public and private Rehabilitation, Rehabilitate - The investment. upgrading of a building previously in a Rezoning (Zoning District Map dilapidated or substandard condition. Amendment) - To change the zoning Renewable Energy Source - Energy sources classification of particular lots or parcels of that do not rely on fossil fuels, including, land. sunlight and wind. (NEW) Right(s)-of-Way - The strip of land over Resident - A person of any age or capacity which certain transportation and/or who lives or regularly stays in Scottsdale. other public facilities are built, including Residents may be full-time, part-time, roads, sidewalks, and utility lines. A public seasonal, or temporary. (NEW) right-of-way is typically dedicated or deeded to the public for public use and controlled by Resort - A building or group of buildings a public agency, such as the city. that include guest rooms and visitor accommodations and may include any of Riparian Areas - Includes both wet and the following amenities: outdoor recreation dry varieties. Wet riparian areas include (e.g. golf, horseback riding), low to moderate temporary and permanent streams with medium density residential developments, naturally occurring plants. Wet riparian supporting commercial services (e.g. areas are an important and rare habitat in restaurants, gift shops) and institutional Scottsdale. Dry riparian areas include major facilities, such as convention or meeting desert washes and minor floodways with space. (Refer to the Land Use Element for naturally occurring plants. (NEW) the Resorts/Tourism Land Use Category Runway Protection Zone (RPZ) - A definition) (NEW) trapezoidal area at or beyond the airport runway end that should, where practicable, remain clear of all above-ground objects to enhance the safety and protection of people and property.

276 Experience. Livability. Prosperity. Glossary Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

Rural, Rural Area - Generally, a Sense of Place, Sense of Community - The less-developed area where the land is characteristics of a location that make it used primarily for low-density residential readily recognizable as being unique and uses., limited low-intensity commercial different from its surroundings and that development, and These areas may include provides a feeling of belonging to or being open space, and permitted uses such identified with that particular place. (See as ranches, stables, equestrian facilities also: Identity) and other equestrian-related uses, and those uses permitted by Use Permit. Sensitive Design Principles - Program (Refer to the Land Use Element for the and documents aimed at strengthening Rural Neighborhoods Land Use Category the focus on design in the community, definition) (NEW) promoting coordination of the city’s design-related efforts and resources, and S guiding discussion of design-related issues. Setback - Typically, the distance between Safe-Yield - A groundwater management a property line and a building or structure. goal to achieve and maintain a long-term Depending on the specific zoning district, balance between the annual amounts of setbacks may be measured in different groundwater extracted and recharged in an ways. area. (NEW) Settling Pond - An area dedicated to the Salinity - The amount of dissolved salt separation and storage of waste residue minerals in water, including calcium, generated from the wastewater treatment magnesium, sodium, sulfate, and chlorides. process and stormwater runoff. (NEW) Too much water salinity can negatively affect vegetation and reduce the life of household Sewer - Any pipe or conduit used to collect plumbing, fixtures, and appliances.(NEW) and carry away CONVEY sewage from the generating source to treatment plants. Scale - The relationship of a particular project or development, in terms of size, Sign Controls - City regulations governing height, bulk, intensity, and aesthetics, to its the location and design of signs. surroundings. Signage - Generally referring to public and Scenic Corridor - A major road designated in private signs and their design attributes. the General Plan that provides a large open Signature Special Events - Annual events space buffer to minimize the visual intrusion and event series staged in Scottsdale that of neighboring development and maximize generate significant economic activity, the unique character of different areas including major league baseball spring of the city. REFER TO THE OPEN SPACE training, arts festivals, auto auctions ELEMENT FOR VISUALLY SIGNIFICANT (e.g. Barrett-Jackson, Russo and Steele), ROADWAY DESIGNATION DEFINITIONS. Culinary Festival, Native Trails, Rock and Scottsdale Visioning (Shared Vision) - Roll Marathon, Arabian Horse Show, Parada 1990-1992 citizen-driven process that del Sol Rodeo and Parade, and the Waste established Four Dominant Themes and Management Phoenix Open. (NEW) 24 Vision-Tasks that define Scottsdale’s character and future.

Experience. Livability. Prosperity. 277 Glossary Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

Single-Family - A house intended for Stepback - In the General Plan, an occupancy by one family that is structurally arrangement of building forms, shapes, and independent from any other dwelling unit. massing that causes the building design to “move away,” “step back,” or recede from Shared-use Path - Paths that accommodate a property line or neighboring development bicyclists and pedestrians. (NEW) to provide an open area above the first or Smart Grid - Controls, computers, second level of the building. The Zoning automation, and other technologies and Ordinance delineates specific stepback equipment that work with the electrical requirements for zoning districts. (NEW) grid (i.e. network of transmission lines, Streetscape - The combination of individual substations and transformers that delivers design elements that characterize the street electricity) to respond quickly and digitally to frontages of the city. Some examples of changing electric demand. (NEW) these elements are landscaping, seating, Solid Waste - General category that lighting, and sidewalk design. includes organic wastes, paper products, Stormwater, Stormwater Runoff - Water metals, glass, plastics, cloth, brick, rock, generated from rain, snowmelt, or drainage. soil, leather, rubber, yard wastes, and Runoff is generated when precipitation wood. Commonly referred to as “trash” or flows over land or impenetrable surfaces “garbage.” (e.g. asphalt) and does not absorb into the Specialty Park - Park that provides ground. As runoff flows over the land, it specialized facilities and preserves accumulates debris, chemicals, sediment, significant, unique features of the and other pollutants that may adversely community. Specialty parks generally serve affect water quality, if untreated. (NEW) the entire city or region; are located where Suburban, Suburban Area - Generally necessary to capitalize or preserve an low- to moderate-density and intensity existing feature, facility or market area; and development patterns consisting may need either a high-degree of access of residential uses and supporting or limited access, depending on purpose. commercial and employment uses. (Refer (NEW) to the Land Use Element for the Suburban Specialty Retail - High-end commercial Neighborhoods Land Use Category businesses selling products or unique definition) (NEW) merchandise of high-quality and price. Sustainability - For the purposes of the A retail store that focuses on specific or General Plan, sustainability is a condition of unique product categories, as opposed to living that enables the present generation retailers who sell a variety of consumer to enjoy social well-being, a vibrant goods. (NEW) economy, and a healthy environment, Stakeholder - A person who is involved with without compromising the ability of future and/or affected by a course of action. (NEW) generations to enjoy the same. (NEW)

278 Experience. Livability. Prosperity. Glossary Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

Transition - 1) A gradual change from one T development density or intensity to another, Telecommuting - A trip reduction strategy from one land use to another, or from a and a work arrangement, where employees preserved area to a developed area; or work at a location other than the primary 2) The placement of buildings and their work location, such as at home or in a forms, shapes, and massing that causes subordinate office. (See also: Trip Reduction) the building design to recede from the property line or neighboring development; Themed Streetscape - A street in the provide open space and openings between General Plan that has, or is planned to have, buildings; and/or create compatible streetscape design guidelines to provide a development between lower and higher consistent, themed appearance along the intensities and densities. street. (NEW) TRANSITION AREAS - A CHANGE FROM ONE Threatened Species - As protected by law DEVELOPMENT AREA TO ANOTHER, EITHER designated by the Federal Government, any IN TERMS OF HEIGHT, DENSITY, INTENSITY, species likely to become endangered within OR CHARACTER – USUALLY AS A MEANS the foreseeable future throughout all or a TO ENSURE COMPATIBILITY BETWEEN significant part of its range.(NEW) DEVELOPMENTS. Trails - A shared-use pedestrian, equestrian, and/or bicyclist route or system that is not U paved. Universal Design - An idea that all Transit - Transportation system mainly for environments and products should be moving many people and made available accessible and useable by all people, to the public, usually through paying a fare. regardless of age, size, or ability. (NEW) Typical vehicles used for transit include buses, rail cars, and other fixed guideway Urban, Urban Area - (1) relating to or vehicles. (NEW) characteristic of a city; or (2) Generally characterized by moderate- to high-density Trip Reduction - Techniques aimed at and intensity development, walkability, and reducing traffic congestion, vehicle trips, available public services to adequately serve and miles traveled with the main goal of high intensity development. Residential improving air quality. Strategies include uses in urban areas tend to consist of carpooling, transit use, walking, biking, multi-family types. (Refer to the Land Use telecommuting, and compressed work Element for the Urban Neighborhoods Land schedules (such as a 4-day work week). Use Category definition) (NEW) (NEW) V Viewsheds - The major segments of the natural terrain that are visible above the natural vegetation from designated scenic viewpoints.

Experience. Livability. Prosperity. 279 Glossary Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

View Corridor - A line of sight between Visitor - Includes tourists and travelers from an observer and an object or feature of outside of the region experiencing, staying, visual significance or sensitivity; AREA or working in Scottsdale for a defined and ALONG MAJOR WATERCOURSES OR OTHER limited time. Visitors may also include FEATURES TO PROTECT MAJOR WILDLIFE short-term daily visitors engaged in various HABITAT, PROTECT DISTANT VIEWS, day or nighttime activities. (NEW) SEPARATE LAND USES, AND PROVIDE LINKS FOR TRAILS AND PATHS. (NEW) W Viewpoint - A position on a major street Wash - Usually a watercourse that flows within Environmentally Sensitive Lands during flood events or intermittently. Washes areas from which significant natural features are important wildlife corridors and habitats. can be viewed. (NEW) (See also: Water Body; Water Course) Vision - A shared dream of the future Wastewater - The used OR EFFLUENT characterized by long-term idealistic water from homes, communities, and and aspirational thinking. The vision is businesses. It includes both domestic AND the foundation for the development of COMMERCIAL sewage and industrial waste, goals, policies, and programs. Although and may contain metals, organic pollutants, a vision is not a binding goal, and may sediment, bacteria, and virusesCONTAINS not be achievable in the lifetime of those MULTIPLE TYPES OF POLLUTANTS. (NEW) participating in the drafting of the General Plan, it provides a picture of the community Water Body - Any permanent or intermittent that the citizens desire. body of water, whether natural or artificial, including arroyos, washes, canals, riverbeds, Vista Corridor - A major open space corridor and lakes. This excludes swimming and that follows major watercourses or other ornamental pools. (NEW) features and protects major wildlife habitat, protects distant views, separates land uses, Water Conservation - Any beneficial and provides links for trails and paths. reduction in water loss, OR waste., and use, as well as, THIS INCLUDES water Visually Significant Roadways management practices that improve the - PRESERVATION OF MOUNTAIN use of water resources to the benefit of VIEWSHEDS, THE SONORAN DESERT, people and/or the environment, including NATURAL FEATURES, AND LANDMARKS wastewater recycling or reuse, gray water THAT ENHANCE THE UNIQUE IMAGE recycling, rainwater harvesting, usage AND AESTHETICS OF MAJOR STREETS reductions, and a variety of other means. THROUGH OPEN SPACE BUFFERING. Visually Significant Roadways include Desert Rainwater Harvesting - Using landscaping Scenic Roadways (in ESLO districts), Scenic and modified infrastructure to COLLECT AND Corridors, roads with buffered setbacks, direct surface RAINwater flow to areas of roads with specific streetscape design soil where water soaks INFILTRATES in and themes, and roads with specific design is stored. (NEW) guidelines. REFER TO THE OPEN SPACE ELEMENT FOR VISUALLY SIGNIFICANT ROADWAY DESIGNATION DEFINITIONS. (NEW)

280 Experience. Livability. Prosperity. Glossary Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

Water Resources - In the General Plan, A term used to collectively describe THE X LEGAL AND PHYSICAL WATER SUPPLY AVAILABLE TO THE CITY WHICH INCLUDES Y groundwater, wastewater, reclaimed water, surface water, AND precipitation, and water supply. Z Watercourse - A lake, riverbed, arroyo, ZERO WASTE - THE CONSERVATION OF ALL wash, or other channel over which water RESOURCES BY MEANS OF RESPONSIBLE flows at least periodically. Watercourses PRODUCTION, CONSUMPTION, REUSE, AND include specifically designated areas where RECOVERY OF PRODUCTS, PACKAGING, AND substantial flood damage may occur. MATERIALS WITHOUT BURNING AND WITH NO DISCHARGES TO LAND, WATER, OR AIR Watershed - The area of land where all THAT THREATEN THE ENVIRONMENT OR of the water underneath it, or draining off HUMAN HEALTH. it, goes to the same place. All areas of Scottsdale drain into the larger Salt River Zoning / Zoning Ordinance - Land use and Gila River watersheds. Some areas of regulations enacted by the city to create the community drain to smaller tributaries, districts or zones that permit and identify including the Verde River, the Indian Bend special conditions within those zones. Land Wash, and other minor watersheds. (NEW) uses in each district are regulated according to type, density, height, lot size, placement, Wayfinding - Enabling a person to find his building bulk, and other development or her way to a given destination through standards. The ordinances include the use of landmarks, effective signage, and procedures for changing the status of land building design. (NEW) use and physical development standards. Wildlife Corridor, Wildlife Movement Corridor, Migration Route - Linkages of vegetated habitat areas that allow or facilitate wildlife movement between larger habitats in an urban environment. (NEW) Workforce Housing - A broad range of owner and renter residential housing, located in or near employment centers, and intended to appeal to essential workers in the community, including police officers, fire fighters, teachers, nurses and medical technicians, hospitality workers, and knowledge and office workers. (NEW)

Experience. Livability. Prosperity. 281 Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3 3. RELATED PLANS & POLICIES ■ Community Services Facilities Master A Plan (20042015) SHIMOKUBO: ■ ADA TRANSITION PLAN ■ City of Scottsdale Competitive Position ■ ADMINISTRATIVE REGULATIONS 333: Analysis and Recommendations (2010) ANTI-DISCRIMINATION AND NON- ■ Scottsdale Cultural Facilities HARASSMENT POLICY (2003) RESOURCES Master Plan (20112016) ■ Airpark Circulation Study (2008) ■ AIRPORT ECONOMIC BENEFIT UPDATE D (2019) ■ Desert Foothills Character Area Plan ■ Airport FAA 14 CFR Part 150 Noise (1999) Compatibility Study (2005) ■ Desert Open Space System Plan (1997) ■ Airport Master Plan (19972015) ■ Scottsdale Desert Park Design ■ Airport Strategic Business Plan (2009) Guidelines (1999) ■ Annexation Policy (1989) ■ Design Guidelines* (for various building types - ongoing) B ■ Design Guidelines and Development Framework for the ASU-Scottsdale Center for New Technology and C Innovation and the Surrounding Area (2005) ■ Cactus Corridor AREA Plan (1992) ■ Design Standards and Policies ■ Capital Improvement Plan* Manual*(2018) ■ CDBG Annual Action Plan* ■ Downtown Infill Incentive District (2010) ■ Central Downtown/Scottsdale Circulation ■ Downtown Character Area Plan (2009) Study (2008) ■ Downtown Circulation Study (2006) ■ Citizen Survey* Feedback (2010) ■ DOWNTOWN SCOTTSDALE PEDESTRIAN ■ City of Scottsdale Charter MOBILITY STUDY (2007) ■ City Code ■ DOWNTOWN TOURISM RELATED ■ CityShape 2020 Comprehensive Report ECONOMIC FEASIBILITY STUDY (2018) (1996) ■ DOWNTOWN PARKING STUDY (2015) ■ Civic Art Urban Design Plan (2001) ■ DROUGH MANAGEMENT PLAN (2015 - ■ COMMERCIAL Solar Panel Placement 2018) Design Guidelines (2019) ■ Dynamite Foothills Character Area Plan ■ Community Cultural Assessment (2007) (2000)

*UPDATED ANNUALLY/PERIODICALLY

282 Experience. Livability. Prosperity. Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

■ Greater Airpark Character Area Plan E (2010) ■ East Shea Area Plan (1987) ■ Green Building (LEED™) Policy for New ■ Comprehensive Economic Development City Construction and Remodels (2005) Strategic Plan Framework (20142020) ■ Green Building Design Strategies ■ Economic Trends Quarterly/Annual PRINCIPLES* (2010) Reports* ■ Green Building Program and Guidelines* ■ Energy Policy (1991, updated 1999) ■ Green Building: Home Remodeling ■ Environmentally Sensitive Lands Guidelines for Sustainable Building in Ordinance (1991 + amendments) the Sonoran Desert (2005) ■ ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATORY GUIDE (2014) H ■ Expressway/Shea Boulevard Policy ■ Housing and Human Services: Analysis (1995) of Impediments to Fair Housing Choices (2011 - 2016) ■ Exterior and Site Lighting Design Guidelines* ■ Housing and Human Services: Five-Year Consolidated Plan (2010 - 2015) F ■ Housing and Human Services: Section 8 Annual Agency Plan* ■ Fire Department Strategic Plan* ■ HUMAN SERVICES PLAN (2020) ■ City of Scottsdale Fiscal Sustainability Analysis (2010) I ■ Frank Lloyd Wright Streetscape Design Guidelines (1991) ■ Integrated Water RESOURCES Master Plan (20082020) ■ Future In Focus Process Summary (2000) ■ Integrated Wastewater Resources Master Plan (2008) G ■ Scottsdale INTELLIGENT TRANSPORTATION SYSTEMS (ITS) ■ City of Scottsdale General Plan Strategic Plan (2003) Assessment Report (2009) ■ International Energy Conservation Code ■ City of Scottsdale General Plan (IECC) for Commercial and Residential Economic Analysis: Development Projects* (2012) Forecasts UPDATE (20102020) ■ International Green Construction Code ■ Golf Course Policy (1997) (IGCC) For Commercial Projects* (2012) ■ Golf in Scottsdale (2013) ■ Great Sonoran Desert Design Concepts (1996) *UPDATED ANNUALLY/PERIODICALLY

Experience. Livability. Prosperity. 283 Related Plans and Policies Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

J ■ MAG Pedestrian Plan (2000) ■ MAG Pedestrian Area Policies and K Design Guidelines (2005) ■ Maricopa Association of Governments MAG Regional Bikeways MASTER Plan L (2007) ■ Land Divisions Ordinance (2007) ■ MAG Regional Off-Street System Plan ■ City of Scottsdale Land Use Assumptions (2001) Report (20132017) ■ Maricopa Association of Governments ■ LIBRARY SYSTEM STRATEGIC PLAN Desert Spaces Plan (1995) (2019) ■ MARICOPA COUNTY ACTIVE ■ LODGING STATISTICS REPORT - TOURISM TRANSPORTATION PLAN (2018) AND EVENTS* ■ Maricopa County Parks and Recreation ■ LONGWOODS RETURN TO SAMPLE - Maricopa Trail Maps* - Scottsdale REPORT - TOURISM AND EVENTS* (2011) ■ LONGWOODS VISITOR RESEARCH ■ Maricopa County Parks and Recreation REPORT - TOURISM AND EVENTS* - Strategic System Master Plan Report (2009) ■ Los Arcos Area Streetscape Guidelines (1994) ■ MARICOPA COUNTY REGIONAL TRAIL SYSTEM PLAN (2004) ■ Los Arcos Redevelopment Plan (1996) ■ McDowell Corridor Improvement ROAD M DESIGN GUIDELINES (2003) ■ McDowell Sonoran Preserve Access ■ MAG ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION PLAN Areas Report DESIGN AND SITE (2020) STANDARDS (1999) ■ MAG Complete Streets Guide ■ McDowell Sonoran Preserve Ordinance (20102011) (2000) ■ MAG Desert Spaces Environmentally Sensitive Development Areas Policies N and Design Guidelines (2000) ■ Neighborhood Assemblage Policy (1993) ■ Maricopa Association of Governments MAG Desert Spaces Plan (1995) ■ Neighborhood Traffic Management Program Policy & Procedures (2010) ■ MAG Environmentally Sensitive Desert Areas: Policies and Design Guidelines ■ North Area Circulation Study (2008) (2000)

*UPDATED ANNUALLY/PERIODICALLY

284 Experience. Livability. Prosperity. Related Plans andEnclosure Policies 1 of Agenda Item 3

O ■ Scenic Corridor Policy (2001) ■ SCOTTSDALE ARTS ANNUAL REPORT ■ OLD TOWN SCOTTSDALE CHARACTER (2018 - 2019)* AREA PLAN (2018) ■ SCOTTSDALE ARTS OVERVIEW & ■ Downtown OLD TOWN SCOTTSDALE CAMPUS VISION (2019) Urban Design and Architectural Guidelines (20042019) ■ SCOTTSDALE ARTS STRATEGIC PLAN (2018 - 2020)* ■ Scottsdale’s City Operating Budget* ■ SCOTTSDALE CULTURAL ASSESSMENT P (2021)* ■ Scottsdale Cultural Council Annual ■ Parks and Recreation Master Plan Report* (2004) ■ Scottsdale Cultural Council Strategic ■ PARKS AND RECREATION STRATEGIC Plan (2011) PLAN (2019) ■ Scottsdale Cultural Census (2007) ■ Peaceful Valley Neighborhood Plan (1992) ■ Scottsdale/Paradise Valley Tourism Study, Part I: Lodging Statistics, August ■ Police Department Strategic Plan* 2013* ■ Power Line Undergrounding Ordinance ■ Scottsdale/Paradise Valley Tourism (1979) Study, Part II: Visitor Statistics, August ■ Scottsdale Protection of Archaeological 2013* Resources Ordinance (1999) ■ Scottsdale Road Streetscape Design ■ Public Art Master Plan (2012) Guidelines (2008) ■ SCOTTSDALE TOWN ENRICHMENT Q PROGRAM (S.T.E.P.) Forum Summaries (1969 - 1982) R ■ SCOTTSDALE WATER STRATEGIC PLAN (2019 - 2024) ■ Report of the Visioning Scottsdale Town Hall (2013) ■ Scottsdale Sensitive Design Principles (2001) ■ RESIDENTIAL Solar Panel Placement Design Guidelines (2016) ■ Shared Vision Report (1992) ■ Scottsdale Roadway Noise Mitigation ■ Shea Area Plan (1993) Abatement Policy (2011) ■ Shea Boulevard Streetscape Design Guidelines (1994) S ■ Sherwood Heights Neighborhood Plan ■ Scenic Corridor Design Guidelines (2002)

(2004) *UPDATED ANNUALLY/PERIODICALLY

Experience. Livability. Prosperity. 285 Glossary Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

■ Southern Scottsdale Character Area Plan (2010) W ■ Stormwater Master MANAGEMENT Plan ■ Waterfront Infill Incentive District (2003) (20052015) ■ WestWorld Master Plan (2003) ■ STRATEGIC PLAN FOR A COMPREHENSIVE SONORAN DESERT X PRESERVATION PROGRAM (1997) ■ Strategy for the Preservation and Y Creation of High-Quality, Safe, and Affordable Housing, (1999) Z ■ Sustainable City Facilities Policy (2001) ■ Zoning Ordinance* T ■ TOURISM RELATED DOWNTOWN ECONOMIC FEASIBILITY STUDY [DOWNTOWN 2.0] (2017) ■ Tourism and Marketing 5-Year Strategic Plan (2013) ■ Trails Master Plan: On The Right Trail (2004) ■ Transportation Implementation and Funding Plan (2009) ■ Transportation Master Plan (20082016) U V ■ Via Linda Streetscape Design Guidelines (1994) ■ Visioning Scottsdale Town Hall Report (2013) ■ VISITOR STATISTICS REPORT - TOURISM AND EVENTS*

*UPDATED ANNUALLY/PERIODICALLY

286 Experience. Livability. Prosperity. Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3 5. MAPS The following Connectivity Chapter maps have been enlarged to show detail.

JENNY LIN RD S C N THIS MAP IS LOCATED IN CONNECTIVITY CHAPTER A WITH AMPLE DETAIL. IT C CIRCLE MOUNTAIN RD R C IS ALSO LOCATED WITHIN S MD S P TRANSPORTATION MASTER S O S E HONDA BOW RD PLAN AND REFERENCED AS SUCH. THEREFORE IT IS UNNECESSARY WITHIN THE ROCKAWAY HILLS RD APPENDIX. BARTLETT DAM RD

DESERT HILLS DR

CAVE CREEK RD

JOY RANCH RD

STAGECOACH PASS

CAREFREE HWY

DOVE VALLEY RD PIMA RD SCOTTSDALE RD LONE MOUNTAIN RD

DIXILETA DR

DYNAMITE BLVD RIO VERDE DR

JOMAX RD HAYDEN RD PALISADES BLVD HAPPY VALLEY RD SCHOOL RD ALMA

PINNACLE PEAK RD

DEER VALLEY RD ST ST ST ST ST

M M T M P N

288 Experience. Livability. Prosperity. Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3 THIS MAP IS LOCATED IN CONNECTIVITY CHAPTER WITH AMPLE DETAIL. IT IS ALSO LOCATED WITHIN TRANSPORTATION MASTER PLAN AND REFERENCED AS SUCH. THEREFORE IT IS UNNECESSARY WITHIN THE APPENDIX.

PINNACLE PEAK RD

DEER VALLEY RD

THOMPSON PEAK PKWY

LOOP

UNION HILLS DR

BELL RD FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT BLVD

GREENWAY PKWY

THUNDERBIRD RD

CACTUS RD

SHEA BLVD PALISADES BLVD ST ST ST ST ST ST ST DOUBLETREE RANCH RD SCOTTSDALE RD

VIA DE VENTURA MCORMICK PKWY S C C

INDIAN BEND RD A C MDONALD DR R C HAYDEN RD S MD S P LINCOLN DR S O S E

CAMELBACK RD PIMA RD LOOP

INDIAN SCHOOL RD ST

M

N M T M P

Experience. Livability. Prosperity. 289 THIS MAP IS LOCATED IN CONNECTIVITY Maps CHAPTER WITHEnclosure AMPLE 1 DETAIL. of Agenda IT ISItem ALSO 3 LOCATED WITHIN TRANSPORTATION MASTER PLAN AND REFERENCED AS SUCH. THEREFORE IT IS UNNECESSARY WITHIN THE APPENDIX.

INDIAN BEND RD S C S

A C R C LINCOLN DR

MDONALD DR

JACKRABBIT RD

CHAPARRAL RDCAMELBACK RD

CAMELBACK RD

INDIAN SCHOOL RD

OSBORN RD LOOP PIMA RD

THOMAS RD ST

OAK ST ST ST GRANITE REEF RD MDOWELL RD

ROOSEVELT ST HAYDEN RD MILLER RD MKELLIPS RD SCOTTSDALE RD

M M T M P N

290 Experience. Livability. Prosperity. Maps Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3 THIS MAP IS LOCATED IN CONNECTIVITY CHAPTER WITH AMPLE DETAIL. IT IS ALSO LOCATED WITHIN JENNY LIN RD E B C N TRANSPORTATION MASTER PLAN AND REFERENCED B L .! B O B R .! B U AS SUCH. THEREFORE IT IS CIRCLE MOUNTAIN RD P S .! HI A C UNNECESSARY WITHIN THE SU P .! R P C .! T APPENDIX. .! P R HONDA BOW RD S MD S P S O S E .!

ROCKAWAY HILLS RD

BARTLETT DAM RD

DESERT HILLS DR

CAVE CREEK RD

JOY RANCH RD

STAGECOACH PASS

.! CAREFREE HWY

DOVE VALLEY RD .! PIMA RD SCOTTSDALE RD .! LONE MOUNTAIN RD

DIXILETA DR .!

.! DYNAMITE BLVD RIO VERDE DR

JOMAX RD HAYDEN RD .! PALISADES BLVD HAPPY VALLEY RD SCHOOL RD ALMA

PINNACLE PEAK RD .! .!.!

DEER VALLEY RD ST ST ST ST ST .! M M T M P N

Experience. Livability. Prosperity. 291 THIS MAP IS LOCATED IN CONNECTIVITY Maps CHAPTER WITHEnclosure AMPLE 1 DETAIL. of Agenda IT ISItem ALSO 3 LOCATED WITHIN TRANSPORTATION MASTER PLAN AND REFERENCED AS SUCH. THEREFORE IT IS UNNECESSARY WITHIN THE APPENDIX.

PINNACLE PEAK RD .! .!.! DEER VALLEY RD

.! .! .! .! ! .! .! .! .! .! .! .! .! .!.!.! THOMPSON PEAK PKWY .! .! .! .! .! .! .! LOOP .! .! .! .! .!.! .!.! .! UNION HILLS DR .! .!

BELL RD .! FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT BLVD .! .! .! .! .! !.! .! .!.!.!. .! .! .! .! GREENWAY PKWY .! .! .! .! .! .!

THUNDERBIRD RD .!

.! .! .!.! .! .! CACTUS RD .! ! .! .! .!.! .!.! .!.! .! .! .! .! .!.! .!.! .!.! .! .! .! .! .! .! SHEA BLVD .! .! .! .! .! .! .! .! .! .! .! .! .! .! .! .! .! ST

.! PALISADES BLVD

.! .! ST ST ST ST ST ST DOUBLETREE RANCH RD SCOTTSDALE RD .! VIA DE VENTURA MCORMICK PKWY

.! E B C C .! .! INDIAN BEND RD .! .! B L .! B O

.! MDONALD DR B R .! B U P S .! HI HAYDEN RD .! .! A C .! .!.! LINCOLN DR SU P .! .! .! R P C .! T .! P R S MD .! .! .! CAMELBACK RD .! .! ! S P .! . S O S E .! .!.! .!.! LOOP .! PIMA RD .! .! .! ! INDIAN SCHOOL RD ST . .!

.! M .! .!.! .! N M T.! M P

292 Experience. Livability. Prosperity. THIS MAP IS LOCATED IN CONNECTIVITY Maps CHAPTER WITH AMPLE DETAIL. IT IS ALSO Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3 LOCATED WITHIN TRANSPORTATION MASTER PLAN AND REFERENCED AS SUCH. THEREFORE IT IS UNNECESSARY WITHIN THE APPENDIX.

E B C S INDIAN BEND RD .! .! B L .! B O .! .! B R B U .! P S .! HI A C SU P .! R P C .! LINCOLN DR .! T .! P R S MD .! S P .! S O S E MDONALD DR .!.! .! .! .! .!

JACKRABBIT RD

CHAPARRAL RDCAMELBACK RD .!.! ! . .!.! .! .! .!

.! CAMELBACK RD .! .! .! .! .! .! .! .! .! .!

INDIAN SCHOOL RD .!

OSBORN RD .!.! .! .!

.! THOMAS RD .! PIMA RD LOOP ST

OAK ST .! .! ST ST .! GRANITE REEF RD MDOWELL RD .! .!

.! ROOSEVELT ST .! HAYDEN RD MILLER RD .! MKELLIPS RD SCOTTSDALE RD

M M T M P N

Experience. Livability. Prosperity. 293 NOTE: PHOTOS EnclosureTHROUGHOUT 1 of Agenda THE DRAFT Item 3 PLAN ARE CURRENTLY UNDER REVIEW AND 4. PHOTO CREDITS BEING UPDATED. THIS CREDIT PAGE WILL BE UPDATED ACCORDINGLY PRIOR TO FINAL CRC Unless noted below, photo by City of Scottsdale PLAN RECOMMENDATION. Cover Page 30, Middle-top, Photo by Maureen Isree

Courtesy of Scottsdale CVB Page 30, Bottom, Photo by Michelle Gee

Executive Summary Page 31, Courtesy of CEB Imagery

Page iii & iv, Photo by Scott Amonson Page 32 & 33, Photo by Maureen Isree

Page viii, Top, Photo by Scott Amonson Section 2

Page viii, Middle-top, Photo by Bill Timmerman LYNNE Page 44 & 45, Photo by Audrey Redding RUSSELL Page 46 & 47, Photo by Scott Amonson Page viii, Middle-bottom, Photo by Jack Joseph Sr. Page 49, Photo by Bill Timmerman LYNNE RUSSELL Page ix, Top, Photo by Catalina Caballero Page 52, Bottom, Photo by Populous Page ix, Middle-Top, Photo by Ken Greshowak Page 53, Middle, Photo by Maureen Isree Page ix, Middle-bottom, Photo by Michelle Gee Page 59, Top, Photo by Howard Myers Page ix, Bottom, Photo by Maureen Isree Page 63 64, Photo by Jack Joseph Sr. Page x, Middle-top, Photo by Bill Timmerman Page 64, Photo by Catalina Caballero Page xi, Top, Photo by Scott Amonson PAGE 83, PHOTO BY SEAN DECKERT Page xi, Middle-bottom, Photo by Scott Amonson Page 85, Photo by Jesse Tallman Page xii, Bottom, Photo by Maureen Isree Page 87, Bottom, Photo by David Kern Page xiv, Bottom, Courtesy of Henkel Page 90 & 91, Photo by Catalina Caballero

Section 1 Page 93, Photo by Ken Greshowak Page 1, Courtesy of Scottsdale CVB Page 94, Photo by Shutterstock Page 3, Photo by Callie H. Page 95, Photo by Howard Myers Page 4 & 5, Courtesy of Scottsdale CVB Page 105, Photo by Michelle Gee Page 7, Top right, Courtesy of Barrett Jackson Page 106, Photo by Eugenia Valentine Page 7, Bottom right, Photo by Maureen Isree Page 113, Photo by Maureen Isree Page 9, Top left, Photo by Scott Amonson Page 115, Photo by Alan English Page 9, Top right, Photo by Donna Probasco Page 116, Photo by Bill Timmerman Page 10, Top, Photo by Al Payne Page 123, Photo by Bill Timmerman Page 11, Top left, Courtesy of Scottsdale Healthcare Page 139, Photo by Scott Amonson Page 11, Top right, Photo by Bill Timmerman Page 141, Photo by James Lawrence Christy

Page 12 & 13, Photo by Bill Cantey Page 143, Photo by Chris Curtis

Page 22 & 23, Courtesy of CEB Imagery Page 151, Photo by Scott Amonson

Page 29, Top, Photo by Scott Amonson Page 154, Photo by Donna Probasco

Page 29, Middle-top, Photo by Catalina Caballero Page 162, Bottom, Photo by Benjamin Baukol

294 Experience. Livability. Prosperity. NOTE: PHOTOS THROUGHOUTEnclosure 1 of THE Agenda DRAFT Item 3 PLAN ARE CURRENTLY UNDER REVIEW AND BEING UPDATED. THIS CREDIT PAGE WILL BE UPDATED ACCORDINGLY PRIOR TO FINAL CRC PLAN RECOMMENDATION. Page 184 & 185, Photo by Maureen Isree SKYSONG

Page 190, Photo by Jaimee Marks

Page 195, Photo by Maureen Isree

Page 2001, Photo by Maureen Isree

Page 203, Top, Photo by Maureen Isree

Page 203, Middle, Photo by James Lawrence Christy

Page 217, Top, Photo by Rossan Santos

Page 225, Courtesy of Henkel

Page 226, Photo by Maureen Isree

Page 228, Courtesy of Scottsdale Healthcare

Page 229, Top, Courtesy of Scottsdale Healthcare

Page 229, Bottom, Courtesy of Scottsdale Community College

Page 230, Photo by Al Payne

Page 232 & 233, Photo by Michelle Gee

PAGE 234, TOP, PHOTO BY MAUREEN ISREE

Section 3

Page 246 & 247, Photo by Maureen Isree

Experience. Livability. Prosperity. 295 Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3 5. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

CITY COUNCIL PLANNING COMMISSION Mayor W.J. “Jim” Lane Paul Alessio Suzanne Klapp George Ertel Virginia Korte Barry Graham Kathleen Littlefield Renee Higgs Linda Milhaven William Scarbrough Guy Phillips Prescott Smith Solange Whitehead Joe Young

2035 GENERAL PLAN UPDATE CITIZEN REVIEW COMMITTEE

LARRY BERNOSKY (AIRPORT ADVISORY COMMISSION)

ROSS CROMARTY (NEIGHBORHOOD ADVISORY COMMISSION, RESIGNED 8/20/2020)

STEVE DODD (MCDOWELL SONORAN PRESERVE COMMISSION)

JANICE ENG (HUMAN SERVICES COMMISSION)

SHAKIR GUSHGARI (DEVELOPMENT REVIEW BOARD, EFFECTIVE 10/15/2020)

PAMELA IACOVO (TRANSPORTATION COMMISSION)

RYAN JOHNSON (SCOTTSDALE ENVIRONMENTAL ADVISORY COMMISSION)

KURT JONES (PARKS AND RECREATION COMMISSION)

CAROL MIRALDI (NEIGHBORHOOD ADVISORY COMMISSION, EFFECTIVE 8/20/2020)

RICHARD NEWMAN (TOURISM DEVELOPMENT COMMISSION)

SHIELA REYMAN (LIBRARY BOARD)

WILLIAM SCARBROUGH (DEVELOPMENT REVIEW BOARD, RESIGNED 10/6/2020)

BLAIR SCHWEIGER (HISTORIC PRESERVATION COMMISSION)

SHANNON SCUTARI (INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY, RESIGNED 8/27/2020)

JANICE SHIMOKUBO (HUMAN RELATIONS COMMISSION)

ELOY YNDIGOYEN (INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY, EFFECTIVE 9/1/2020)

296 Experience. Livability. Prosperity. Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

GENERAL PLAN TASK FORCE (Dates of Service)

Wendy Springborn, Chair (6/3/2013 - 11/3/2014) Donna Hardin (6/3/2013 - 11/3/2014)

Timothy P. Burns, Vice Chair (6/3/2013 - 11/3/2014) John Hink (6/3/2013 - 11/3/2014)

Phil Allsopp (6/3/2013 - 11/3/2014) Rick Kidder (6/3/2013 - 11/3/2014)

Kathe Barnes (6/3/2013 - 11/3/2014) Loren Molever (6/3/2013 - 11/3/2014)

Mike Bergfeldt (8/19/2013 - 11/3/2014) Jude Nau (6/3/2013 - 11/3/2014)

Nancy Cantor (6/3/2013 - 11/3/2014) Suzanne Paetzer (6/3/2013 - 11/3/2014)

Dawn Cartier (6/3/2013 - 11/3/2014) Doreen Reinke (6/3/2013 - 11/3/2014)

Joe Galli (6/3/2013 - 11/3/2014) Laraine Rodgers (6/3/2013 - 11/3/2014)

Troy Gillenwater (6/3/2013 - 11/3/2014)

Former Task Force Members Ace Bailey (6/3/2013 - 7/25/2013) James Moulton (6/3/2013 - 1/10/2014)

Bill Camp (6/3/2013 - 7/25/2013) Howard Myers (6/3/2013 - 1/13/2014)

James Heitel (6/3/2013 - 1/13/2014) Ned O’Hearn (6/3/2013 - 1/13/2014)

Abby Hoover (6/3/2013 - 5/12/2014) Joanne “Copper” Phillips (6/3/2013 - 1/13/2014)

Sonnie Kirtley (6/3/2013 - 4/8/2014)

BOARDS AND COMMISSIONS Airport Advisory Commission Neighborhood Advisory Commission Development Review Board Parks & Recreation Commission Historic Preservation Commission Scottsdale Arts Human Relations Commission Scottsdale Environmental Advisory Commission Human Services Commission Tourism Development Commission Library Board Transportation Commission McDowell Sonoran Preserve Commission

Experience. Livability. Prosperity. 297 Acknowledgements Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Jim Thompson, City Manager Brad Lundahl, Government Relations Christina Brady, City Manager’s Office Megan Lynn, City Manager’s Office Brian Biesemeyer, Water Resources Gary Mascaro, Aviation Donna Brown, Human Resources Mark , Transportation Karen Churchard, Tourism & Events Rob , Economic Development Kelly Corsette, Office of Communications Bill Murphy, Assistant City Manager Sylvia Dlott, Acting Budget Director Joseph Olcavage, Presiding Judge Judy Doyle, Acting City Treasurer Alan Rodbell, Chief of Police Brian Dygert, Westworld Sherry Scott, City Attorney Kroy Ekblaw, Strategic Projects Thomas Shannon, Fire Chief Randy Grant, Community & Economic Development Rachel Smetana, Mayor’s Chief of Staff Brad Hartig, Information Technology Brent Stockwell, Assistant City Manager Carolyn Jagger, City Clerk Sharron Walker, City Auditor Ken Kung, City Court Dan Worth, Public Works

CITY STAFF PROJECT TEAM Randy Grant, Planning & Economic Development Executive Director Joe Padilla, Deputy City Attorney Erin Perreault, Long Range Planning Director Taylor Reynolds, Project Coordination Liaison Adam Yaron, Project Coordination Liaison

298 Experience. Livability. Prosperity. AcknowledgementsEnclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

OTHER CONTRIBUTING CITY STAFF Michelle Albanese Jim Ford Craig Noll Richard Anderson Steve Geiogamah Joe Padilla Greg Bestgen Scott Hamilton Kira Peters Sam Brown Brian Hancock Scott Popp Brad Carr Christy Hill Reed Pryor Lorraine Castro Michelle Holmes Joy Racine Michael Clack Jan Horne Kevin Rose Bryan Cluff Cassie Johnson Jeff Ruenger Susan Conklu Alfred Kane Amy Tinder Tim Conner Raun Keagy Josh Utterback Frances Cookson Phil Kercher Steve Venker Ashley Couch Elisa Klein David Walby Tim Curtis Ratna Korepella Amanda Willis Michelle Dalton Scott Mars Bob Wood Greg Davies Doris McClay Gerd Wuestemann Cindi Eberhardt Brandon McMahon Mark Zimmerman Sarah Ferrara Ben Moriarity Anthony Floyd Keith Niederer

OUTREACH CONSULTANTS Arizona Town Hall RBF Consulting, a Baker Company

Experience. Livability. Prosperity. 299 Acknowledgements Enclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

COMMUNITY PARTICIPANTS (920) APS • W. Abbot • Heather Acevedo • Bill Adams • Bill Adler • Matthew Adler • H Agelakos • Mark Alastair • Daniel Albers • Peggy Alexander • Dave Alford • Harold Alldredge • Carolyn Allen • Lauren Allsopp • Phil Allsopp • Richard Alt • Corrine Ambrosino • Philip Ambrosino • Andrew Ament • Scott Amonson • Alex Anderson • David Anderson • Jean Anderson • John Anderson • Wendy Anderton • Andy Andrews • Kerry Antha • Alastair Archer • Marilyn Archer • Olivia Argue • David Arnce • Heidi Artigue • Michael Auerbach • Patty Badenoch • Juan Bahena • Marguerite Baier • Ace Bailey • Tracy Bailey • Briona Baker • Corey Baker • Susan Baker • Edward Balaban • Todd Bankofier • Lynda Barber • Kathe Barnes • Kelly Barnes • Sue Barnes • Joan Baron • James Barringer • Briana Barron • Thomas Bartel • Jason Bartness • Kurtis Barton • Sharon Barton • Karen Batchelor • Lynda Bauber • Benjamin Baukol • Laura Bavetz • Roy Beal • Georgie Beard • Bryce Beck • Perry Becker • Patty Bedenoch • Tom Bell • Peggy Beltrone • Tony Bennett • Steven Benson • Sue Berends • Mike Bergfeldt • Drew Bernhardt • Larry Bernosky • David Berry • Jackson Berry • John Berry • Thomas Bethke • Bruce Beverly • Cindy Bilsing • Bob Binder • Kate Birchler • Caroline Bissel • Jane Blacker • Jane Blade • Deb Blevins • Denise Blommel • Dru Bloomfield • Paul Blum • Joan Bogert • Steve Bohata • Kevin Bollinger • Natasha Bonfield • Jason Bortness • Paul Boston • Stephen Botel • Michael Bouscher • Matt Braccia • Michael Brady • Ute Brady • Ann Brandes • David Brantner • Bob Breen • Caroline Breidenbach • Gary Bretz • Richard Breyer • Emily Bristor • Ute Brody • Dawn Brokaw • Rosanna Brokaw • Donna Bronski • Brian Brookman • Chris Brown • David Brown • Denny Brown • Randsom Brown • Sany Bruner • Stanley Burech • James “Red” Burgess • Susan Burnell • Philip Burnett • Judith Burns • Michelle Burns • Timothy Burns • Karen Burstein • Kurtis Burton • David Butchin • Judi Butchin • Sarah Butchin • Cynthia Byers • Joseph Byme • Catalina Caballero • Amber Calhoun-Kern • Jane Callahan • Laryn Callaway • Hannah Cameron • Bill Camp • Sam Campana • James Campbell • Bill Cantey • Nancy Cantor • Robert Cappel • Gretchen Caraway • Tyler Cardinal • Clayton Carmean • Tammy Carr • Jane Carson • Dawn Cartier • Noemi Casarrubias • Brittany Case • Ken Casey • Philip Castroviaci • Michael Cavanaugh • Barbara Cawthorne • Susan Cayhill • David Cheren • Roger Childers • Andrew Chippindall • Al Christenson • Corbin Cieniawski • Alan Cisar • Ryan Clancey • Lavar Clegg • Michael Cline • Richard Cochran • Laurie Coe • Cathy Coker • Christopher Cole • Sofi Collins • Teri Conrad • Lee Cooley • Wm Cope • Evonda Copeland • Larry Corbett • Sheryl Cordane • Shirl Cordane • Rick Cornish • Kathy Coster • Don Couvillion • Arisbeth Covarrubias • Kenneth Cox, III • Susan Coykendall • Nancy Crist • Suzan Curtin • Swan Curtin • Chris Curtis • Michael D’Andrea • Shelly Dadley • Bobbie Daley • Jack Daley • Scott Danboise • Regan Danis • Naveen Dasari • Katelyn Davani • Cayanne Davila-Nelson • Cathy Davis • Kayla Davis • Mitch Davis • Marty Day • Roger Day • Oscar de las Salas • George Dean • Alessandro DeAngelis • Leanne Debeurre • Richard Deems • Connie Dekavallas • Aracely Delgado • Lito Delmo • Justin Dent • Jim Derouin • Mark Dershowitz • Sergio Desoto • Frederick Dettman • Christopher Deutsch • Jojean Dikeman • Hope Dilbeck • Kim Dodds • Rachel Dodell • Patricia Dooher • Lynn Dorsett • Helen Dowell • Taylor Doyle • Betty Drake • Robert Dretske • Shelly Dubley • Beth Duckett • Gordon Dudley • Shelly Dudley • Judy Dugan • Kathy Duley • Jim Duncan • Pam Dunlock • Margaret Dunn • Mark Dunning • Sydney Dye • Michael Eck • Martha Ecton • Wayne Ecton • Mark Edelman • C. Edward • Kevin Edwards • Michael Edwards • Tom Enders • Con Englehorn • Gabrielle Enriquez • Christine Erwin • John Evans • Ali Fakih • Laura Falduto • Brett Farmiloe • Evelyn Farrel • Andy Fegley • George Fekas • Marti Fenton • Stan Ferol • Scott Field • Erik Filsinger • Donna Finch • Terry Finch • Dale Fingersh • Scott Finkelmeyer • Robert Fishman • Kerry Flanagan • Jason Floor • Liam Foedish • William Follette • Janet Foote • Jon Ford • Ron Forti • Frances Fortified • Kylie Fortune • Nadine Foster-Day • Hugh Fox • Robert Fox • George Frentzel • Floris Freshman • Mckenna Friedline • Craig Friedman • Robert Frost • Joan Fudala • James Funk • Tom Gagen • Elie Gaines • Margaret Gallagher • Joe Galli • Aubrey Gardner • Richard Gardner • Carol Garey • Bradley Garr • Michelle Gee • Teri George • Cynthia Gerard • Eric Gerster • Eric Gerster • Felix Geselle • Jerry Gettinger • Rosemary Ghirardi • Paul Giancola • David Gibson • Randall Gibson • Troy Gillenwater • Elwyn Gillette • Debra Gilmor • Candice Gimbel • Autumn Gipson • Eric Gipson • Annie Glenn • Nancy Godfrey • Richard Golden • Robert Goldman • Russell Goldstein • Syd Golston • Nancy Gonzales • Micheal Gonzales • Colleen Goodrich • Laura Grafman • Laura Grafman • Barry Graham • Arianna Grainey • Jason Grandon • Ed Grant • Marc Grayson • John Greco • Michele Greenberg • Ken Greshowak • Jeanette Griswold • Bernie Gross • Daniel Gruber • Rachel Gruenberg • Carl Grupp • Terry Gruver • Leonard Gubar • Rebecca Guldberg • Melinda Gulick • David Gulino • Cari Gupp • Ramit Gupta • Callie H. • Lisa Haarer • Mark Hackbarth • John Haedicke • Raymond Haener • Bonnie Hall • Chris Hall • Melvin Hall • Lois Halligan • Azim Hameed • JoAnn Handley • Terrance Hanson • Mary A. Harden • Donna Hardin • Greg Harmon • Kirstin Harper • Diana Harris • Virginia Harris • George Hartz • Cathy Hattaway • Cale Haug • Sverrir Hauksson • Maximillian Havre • Jim Haxby • Jeanne Hayes • Lucille Haynes • Richard Hayslip • Sally Heath-Lloyd • Doug Hecker • Bill Heckman • James Heitel • Steve Helm • Stephen Hermann • Savannah Hernandez • Tom Hester • Camille Hill • Steven Hillman • John Hink • Ren Hirose • Bob Hobbi • Dave Hochstrasser • Steve Hogan • John Holdsworth • Paul Holley • John Holmes • Abby Hoover • Audrey Horne • Myrna Horton • Donna Hottinger • Bill Howard • Bobbie Howard• Denis Howe • Gil Howie • Brad Hubert • Evelyn Hughes • Stephen Hulston • Cheryl Hultquist • Kiley Hunt • Bronte Ibsen • Chris Irish • Donna Isaac • Maureen Isree • Craig Jackson • Andy Jacobs • Elizabeth Jafp • Marschelle James • Doug (D.J.) Jameson • Com Jameson • Paul Jasa • J Jawor • Paris Jean • Ian Jeffery • Lou Jekel • Bonnie Jensen • Marcia Jepson • Linda Johnson • Barbara Jonas • Bastasa Jonas • Michael Jonas • Jeremy Jones • Christopher Jones • Jack Joseph, • Michal Ann Joyner • Diana Kaminski • Howard Kandell • Robert Kane • Peter Kapileo • Evelyn Karis • Torrey Katz • Charles Kaufman • Mike Kelly • Tim Kenepp • Dawn Kennedy • Laura Kennedy • Fritz Kenth • Bruce Kerr • Nick Kerstetter • Ed Kertman • Nick Kevern • David Keyser • Rick Kidder • Natalie Kilker • Cheryl King • Eric King • Ron King • Carolyn Kinville • Pam Kirby • Ellen Kirchman • Tanya Kirkpatrick • Jessica Kirsch • Sonnie Kirtley • Jared Kisler • Susanne Klappe • Doug Klassen • Fred Klein • Roger Klingler • Pete Klute • Artin “Art” Knadjian • Stan Koczka • Hans Koppenholfon • Jeanine Korer • Cynthia Korte • Virginia Korte • John Kostarus • Kyle Kostric •

300 Experience. Livability. Prosperity. AcknowledgementsEnclosure 1 of Agenda Item 3

Christine Kovach • Stan Kozcka • Andrea Kranitz • Scott Krenytzky • Suhas Krishna • Nile Kristol • Debra Kuffner • Lynn Lagarde • Louise Lamb • Jim Lane • Savannah Lane • T Lane • Brad Larsen • Eric Larson • Jane Larson • Marie Larson • Sabrina LaSpisa • Loyce Laux • Clifford Lawrence • Christine Layman • Jami Layman • Mike Leary • Lisa Leathers-Cox • Ashlee Lebiecki • Valerie LeBlanc • Jordan Ledbetter • Carolyn Leff • Richard Leger • Linda Leo • Jay Lewis • Martin Lieberman • Dorothy Lincoln-Smith • John Little • Kathy Littlefield • Robert Littlefield • Sally Lloyd • Amy Loeschen • Laurence Loew • Keith Loftin • TJ Longo • Vincent Lopez • Jean LoPoro • Troy Lowe • Luke Lujan • Ann Lundeen • Laurie Lundquist • Jeffrey Luth • Ted Luther • Nina Lutz • Susan Luz • Douglas Lyons • Nang Ma • Amy MacAulay • Marty Macurak • Susan Magee • Kristine Mangiapane • Ross Maniaci • Christine Mann • Michael Manson • David Maples • Valerie Marbach • Karen Marco • David Marquez • Floyd Marsh • Floyd Marshdan • Joel Martian • Kayvon Martin • Moniquea Martinez • Matt Mason • Marissa Masters • Anna Mathews • Genny Matteucci • Monte Matz • Michael Mayer • Donald Mayeski • Carol Mazure • Maryann McAllen • Brian McBarren • Patricia McCauley • Marna McClendon • Robert McCreary • John McCrory • Nancy McCrory • John McEnroe • Patrick McGee • Deborah Mcintyre • John McKown • Alex Mclaren • Marna McLendon • Alisa McMahon • Jason McNeal • Carol McNulty • Michael Medici • Joe Meli • Darrell Member • Cheryl Menayas • Kimberly Mendiola • Michael Meng • Pat Merrill • Ralph Merrill • Bob Merwitzer • Matt Metz • Howard Meyers • Brad Michaelson • Michael Milillo •Brian Miller• Dan Miller • Connor Miller • Craiss Miller • Gerald Miller • Michael Miller • Wyatt Alan Miller • Linda Millhaven • Phyllis Minzer • Carolyn Mitchell • Loren Molever • Connie Moll • Brian MonBarren • Isabel Montiel • Taraneh Moosavi • Charlie Moreno • Tom Morgan • Matteo Moric • Janet Morris • James Moulton • John Mueller • Richard Mueller • Eric Mulvin • Michael Muscheid • Lynn Mushorn • Nikhil Muthuvenkatesh • Howard Myers • Jude Nau • Warren Neiman • Regina Nelms • Scott Nelson • Marg Nelssen • Nelson Nemeth • Randy Nussbaum • Cheryl Nestico • Jackie Newman • Jacomina Newman-Osmon • Jeff Nielsen • Jim Nissen • Kim Nofsinger • Cole Novatt • Hugo (Dixon) Oates • Sharon Oberritter • Jim O’Connor • Brian O’Donnell • Kent Oertle • Mary Oertle • Ned O’Hearn • Israel Olivares • Jean Oliver • Steven Olmsted • Dennis Olsen • David Ortega • Taryl O’Shea • Doug Ostroski • Michelle Pabis • Suzanne Paetzer • Rebel Pallotti • Jeewon Park • Jackson Parker • Lou Parker • Leila Parnian • Lynne Parrish • Marvelin Parsons • Jen Pastiak • Kevin Patrick • Steven Pattison • Steven Pattyn • Don Paulus • Rachel Pearson • Melaie Pelchat • Raymond Pelelas • Ron Pelton • Susan Pensiero • Alexa Pereda • Larry Person • Matt Personne • Darlene Petersen • Erik Peterson • Hailey Peterson • Ken Peterson • Nick Petra • Pomuma Philbrook • Copper Phillips • Guy Phillips • Milo Phillips • Bernie Pickart • Bill Pillow • Dave Pivin • Scottsdale Plan • Thomas Pleiman • Darlene Poeterson • Candace Porth • Carol Poston • Charles Poston • Nathalie Potvin • Alastair Prescott • Donna Probasco • Don Quinn • Kaitlyn Quinn • Linda Rabius • Robert Ragens • Emily Rajakovich • Anita Ramaswamy • Angelica Ramon • Don Randolph • Paula Randolph • Emily Ratakovich • Hattie “Jane” Rau • Janet Rebollar • Garrett Redd • Audrey Redding • Deborah Reeder • Elizabeth Rehling • Doreen Reinke • Zachary Reinstein • Elizabeth Rekliz • Joey Reynolds • Robb Rezak • Leroy Rhein • Andrew Rice • JoAnn Rice • Court Rich • Marvin Richman • Emilee Rickerson • Rock Rickert • April Riggins • Joel Rivera • Dennis Robbins • Whitney Roberts-Gies • Laraine Rodgers • Robert Rodgers • Timothy Rodgers • Heidi Rodriguez • Robert Rogers • Joe Romack • Sieglinde Rooney • Steven Rosenberg • Dale Roth • Julie Rudnick • Chris Ruhm • Annete Rumbauger • Max Rumbaugh • Dan Russell • James Ryan • Nancy Sage • Sarah Sakha • Frank Sales • Amanda Salt • Melissa Sanderson • Rossan Santos • Bret Sassenberg • John Sather • Stephen Sawyer • Chris Schaffner • Jim Schamadan • Amber Scharnow • Carolyn Scheer • Sandy Schenkat • Douglas Schermer • Phyllis Schibonski • Harry Schlegelmilch • Sandy Schmidt • Ellen Schneider • Kenna Schoenle • David Scholefield • Michael Schor • Jeffrey Schwartz • David Schwarz • Kathyin Schwarz • Bill Schweikert • Anne Scotford • Dierk Seeburg • Sandra Seeburg • Michael Seiden • Rebecca Seifert • Dan Semenchuk • Melinda Semon-Ford • Orlando Serna • Anita Shanker • Linda Shaw • William Sheaffer • Elizabeth Sheldon • Ronad Shelton • Kathy Shiemare • Jack Shipka • Prakriti Shukla • Kathy Shumard • Ayanna Siders • Bob Sierk • Gail Sikes • Diane Silver • Sandra Simms • Carla Simon • Melanie Sircar • Ron Sisley • Sue Sisley • Norwood Sisson • Brian Skow • John Sliwa • Mary Sliwa • Lee Small • Rachel Smetana • Diana Smith • Grant Smith • Judith Smith • Micky Smith • Randall Smith • Ross Smith • Tim Smith • Sarah Snider • Eric Solheim • Andrew Song • Leslie Sonnier • John Southard • William Sowle • A.T. (Spence) Spencer • Wendy Springborn • Frank Stallone • Alice Stanbaugh • Karl Stanbaugh • Carol Stanley • Jenna Starmer • Enrico “Rick” Stein • Jack Stein • Mark Steinbeck • Steven Steinke • Amy Stephens • Susan Stephens • Robert Stickles • Amy Stifter • Caroline Stoeckel • Sharon Straede-Smith • Joseph Stratton • Tim Stratton • James Strohan • Mark Stuart • Michelle Stuhl • Carol Suits • Andre Sutherland • Douglas Sydnor • Kathleen Tate • Joyce Tawes • Mara Taylor • Therese Tendick • Audrey Thacker • Carmen Thomas • James Thomas • Jeff Thomas • Lauren Thorell • Chrisanne Tirres • Patsy Toddes • Lorie Torch • Paul Trapp • Lynn Trimble • Ingrid Trott • Guy Trujillo • Nora Trulsson • Archie Tucker • Linda Tucker • Evelyn Tweit • Norm Tweit • David Twigger • Agnese Udinotti • Jaime Uhrich • Charles Unfricht • Frederick Unger • James Upchurch • Bill Valencia • David Valencia • Eugenia Valentine • Daul Valenzuela • Mary Vandevord • Shannon Van Ziaphen • Kelly Vaughan • Hazel Vaughn • Charlie Velasquez • John Vicari • Robert Vierguzz • Taylor Viggiano • Jose Villa • Jane Von Schilling • Steven Voss • Marcus W. • John Wake • Jim Walker • Linda Wallard • Ben Walter • Ron Walter • Harry Walters • Marge Walters • Sabrina Walters • Paul Ward • Thomas Warren • Charles Warshaver • John Washington • Adam Wasserman • Nancy Way • Rebecca Weber • Steve Weckstein • Debra Weisberg • Greg Weisman • Josh Weiss • Shelby Weiss • Tucker Wells • Sam West • Susan Wheeler • Tim White • Linda Whitehead • William Whitlow • Doris Wigington • Mary Wilber • Preston Wiley • Dave Wilhem • Gerrie Wilhem • Jeff Willaims • Cody Wilson • Joyce Wilson • Linda Wilson • Lloyd Wilson • Marjorie Wilson • Mitzi Wilson • Aron Winter • James Wisda • Barbara Withoria • Aaron Witt • Chip Wittrock • Jacqueline Wolf • Ian Wolf • Jeffery Wolf • Parish Wood • Susan Wood • Sandra Worthington • Eddie Wright • Matthew Wright • Nancy Wright • Janet Wunnicke • Anne Wurth • Susan Wz • Jordan Yanow • Kathleen Yelin • Angela Young • Chris Young • Coreen Young • Gavin Young • Klee Young • Zoe Zacharopoulos • Lois Zapernick • Penny Zega • Carol Zifferin • Cortney Ziffron • Stephen Ziomek • Jack Zohar • Felipe Zubia • Gabriel Zubia • Paul Zubia • Joan Zuckerman

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